houshanghai
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2009
- Messages
- 1,732
- Reaction score
- 0
self delete
there is no need
there is no need
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Still cannot resist putting that in, can you? Care to explain to the readers what does one's ethnicity has to do with aviation 'stealth'?sir,ignore these trollers especially a american-vietnamese poor experts and a anti-china racists
sir,ignore these trollers especially a american-vietnamese poor experts and a anti-china racists
Challenging the APA's flawed methodology and report is not being anti-China. And if anything, I dare say based upon my postings about the basics of radar detection and 'stealth', my background seems more valid than yours about the subjects.Two ways to resolve the problem:
1. Separate the Chinese members who post updated pictures, insights, and articles from the anti-China trolls by creating two distinct threads.
2. Moderators stop the anti-China trolls from posting a ridiculous number of frivolous anti-China comments.
Gambit makes 10 to 15 posts for every one that I post. My new post on the J-20 and F-35 comparison, where I contrast the J-20's optimization across "nine radar-frequency bands" and the F-35's optimization across only two radar bands (e.g. X and upper S) and I explain the non-stealthy lumps and bumps on the F-35's underside, has been buried in a landslide of regurgitated Gambit posts from months ago or his endless discussion about his personal background.
If a solution is not found, either one or two, I will stop posting here soon.
Still cannot resist putting that in, can you? Care to explain to the readers what does one's ethnicity has to do with aviation 'stealth'?
http://lt.cjdby.net/thread-1183528-1-1.htmlWho took this picture. The weather doesn't look too good today. Too foggy.
Fan blockers could reduce RCS by covering up exposed fan blades too. However some damage is done. I am not sure that I agree with Kopp's assertion that the F-35 has a similar RCS to "clean" Fourth gen though.
Wouldn't using continuous curvature help reduce RCS with those bumps though?
If that is truly what Kopp said, then he is an idiot. A flat underside is no less reflective than a 'bumpy' one...I know Santro is not convinced that "lumps and bumps" are not stealthy. I am posting my response from another forum to explain the issue further.
----------
That's not what Kopp said. He said only from certain angles; especially a ground-radar illuminating the underside of the lumpy F-35. Basically, the lumpy F-35 underside is not that much different from a lumpy F-15 or F-16 underside.
The more lumps that you have, the less stealthy you become.
No issues here.If you do a ray trace of a narrow beam impacting on a sphere, like a small beach ball, there would be very few rays bouncing directly back. This is the concept of continuous curvature.
The difference here is that the golf ball's dimples are uniformly arrayed and for a different purpose. At best, this is a partially appropriate analogy.However, if you do a ray trace of a golf ball with many dimples, there would be many more rays bouncing back from those dimples. Technically speaking, the golf dimples are concave surfaces and the F-35 lumps are convex surfaces. However, the effect is the same. This is the best analogy I can think of.
And I will say without reservations that YOU do not have that understanding.In conclusion, the principle of continuous curvature does not mean that if you make a surface smooth and curvy then you're stealthy. It is important to understand the limitations of a design principle.
The flaw here is that APA does not have the true physical dimensions of the Russian's or the Chinese's aircrafts. So in criticizing APA's methodology, no state secrets need be revealed. If APA is so confident of their Physical Optics ONLY modeling of the J-20, then why do they not perform the same for all the famous 'stealth' aircrafts currently in the public eye? Then throw in a few 'non-stealth' aircrafts for baseline comparisons?From Aviation Week in 2009: If you want to claim the "APA has got their models wrong, it probably wouldn't compromise security to explain why." Don't try to hide behind the argument of secrecy. The Chinese and Russians already have their own radar modeling software. "The worst argument against APA, though, is that of secrecy."
No, we cannot. At best, we can only give APA credit for being honest enough to admit that their Physical Optics ONLY modeling has shortcomings. If flawed methodology alone is enough to make APA's result suspect, then there is no need for Lockheed to response with their data.Since Lockheed or another reputable organization has not published a study to challenge the APA analysis in two years, we can only conclude the APA models are accurate.
In no way does that make the J-20 superior to the F-35. There is no logical relationship.Aviation Week has implicitly acknowledged the F-35's shortcoming by suggesting the F-35 is "stealthy enough to survive." However, that was two years ago, before the debut of the J-20 Mighty Dragon in 2011.
And which is that 'conventional fighter'? Could it be the F-16? A clean F-16 is very difficult to find by other 'conventional' fighters of the same era and technology, including Russian radars, airborne or ground stations. However, assuming we grant this argument that wide a latitude, we must understand that a clean F-35's lethality is much greater than a clean F-16. A visually clean F-35 can be armed or unarmed. A clean F-16 is unarmed. This is a very weak criticism.JSF News 2 - Stealth Questions Raised
JSF News 2 - Stealth Questions Raised
Posted by Bill Sweetman at 1/7/2009 7:30 AM CST
The Air Power Australia team have produced an unprecedented report which asserts that the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter is much less stealthy than the F-22[/B] - and in fact is comparable in radar cross-section (RCS), under some circumstances, to a conventional fighter in clean condition. APA's updated surveys of modern Russian radars - which are most likely to form the basis of the threat systems that it would encounter from the late 2010s onwards - have set the scene for this analysis.
It also mean that there are much more powerful computing tools to predict, model, then verify complex bodies than civilians could access. Further, civilians do not have access to the aircraft itself and EM anechoic chambers to verify the true physical dimensions of these complex bodies.The report is unprecedented because it's the first "civilian" use of radar scattering models to take a first-order look at an aircraft's RCS. It was the development of computer-based RCS models that opened the way to the development of stealth in the 1970s: the theory of scattering was well known but was too hard to apply to a 3-D shape without those tools.
It also does not mean their data should be taken as gospel, especially when they do not have access to the aircraft's true physical dimensions.The APA analysis will no doubt be countered by the JSF team in several ways. They'll argue that the APA team has an agenda. They will argue that the analysis is too crude to reflect reality; that anything it does show is not operationally relevant; and that the true picture is much more complex and (of course) secret.
The APA team does have an open agenda (as does the JSF team) but that does not mean that their data is bad.
Fine...Then we can dismiss materials. But that does not mean Overholser's admonition has been violated in any way by the F-35. Shaping to influence radar signal behaviors goes beyond specular reflections but edge diffractions and assort surface wave variables. APA's methodology admitted they do not have the aircraft's true physical dimensions and do not process non-specular signals. If the F-35's various 'bumps and humps' do not raise the aircraft above a certain threshold commonly known as 'stealthy' enough, then the F-35 is true to Overholser's admonition.The analysis is crude insofar as it doesn't make any detailed estimates of the effects of radar absorbent material (RAM). On the other hand, the doctrine laid down by Stealth pioneer Denys Overholser still stands: the four most important aspects of stealth are shape, shape, shape and materials.
Then APA is free to perform the same flawed Physical Optics ONLY methodology on the F-15, F-16, F-117, F-22, F-35, and the B-2 to benefit the public over Lockheed's cartoons. Why have APA not done so but instead zero in only on the J-20?On the other hand, the APA analysis is a lot more detailed than the cartoon representations in Lockheed Martin briefings. And more realistic than the claims of total invisibility made on JSF's behalf.
Then perhaps a more legitimate comparison would be between the F-22 and the J-20? This make no sense. APA performed a flawed measurement/analysis ONLY on the J-20 but not on both the F-22 and F-35. Then despite the absence of comparative data, APA declared that while the J-20 is inferior to the F-22 despite having the same flat underside, it is superior to the F-35 based upon the latter's 'bumps and humps'. How can the J-20 be inferior to the F-22 in the first place? Based upon what comparative data? The moving canards? But then if the all-moving canards made the J-20 inferior to the F-35, is it possible that those same canards make the J-20's RCS the same or higher than the F-35 despite the latter's underside 'bumps and humps'?The APA team also makes the point that the F-35 doesn't look as much like an F-22 (or the X-35) as you might think. Those two aircraft both reflected a refined version of the F-117 shape - they are basically faceted designs, although they incorporate large radius curves and the lines between facets are smoothed. But the F-35 has acquired some very conventional-airplane-shaped lumps and bumps around its underside, not to mention the hideous wart that covers the gun on the F-35A. It's enough to raise questions.
Very seldom do aircrafts go anywhere alone. A pack of F-35, even if we grant that they are as detectable as clean F-16s, with their superior avionics and networking capabilities, they will do more than just survive. They can fight and win. What do we know of the J-20's avionics?Of course, it's possible to argue that the F-35 meets its stealth requirements (which may or not be the same for all F-35s), and that it will be stealthy enough to survive - combined with situational awareness and tactics.
Reasonable enough. Then unless we know what the J-20's threat requirements are, the comparison between the J-20 and the F-35 is an invalid one. The F-35's missions are well known. It is to be a jack-of-all-trades with high standards for all of those trades. What do we know of the J-20? Nothing other than we know there are speculations.But that in turn depends on what the requirements are, and what threats it was designed against. (That's why stealth air vehicles are as diverse as they are, from the DarkStar to the AGM-129, while submarines look pretty much the same.) In the design of the F-22, for example, features such as 2-D nozzles, edges swept at 42 degrees, and high-altitude, high-speed flight were required to address that threat set.
In simulations, yes. But in EM anechoic chambers? Not likely. Absent precise physical dimensions, any simulated results are suspect.More recently, the Northrop Grumman X-47B and Boeing X-45C designs have clearly been aimed at all-aspect, wideband stealth - although that's particularly important for an unmanned vehicle, which may not be as flexible in its response to a pop-up threat.
The worst argument against APA, though, is that of secrecy. Implemented on an experimental airplane 30 years ago, stealth is no longer covered by Arthur C. Clarke's principle that "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Competitors and potential adversaries around the world have assuredly run F-35 models in simulations, in RCS chambers and on open ranges. So if APA has got their models wrong, it probably wouldn't compromise security to explain why.
false flag and you arenot a real chinese
Or how about you get banned for being a false flagging suicide troll.