I had read your post in #36. I did not reply that because it was just ridiculous.
How was it 'ridiculous' ? I merely used Marty's own comparison method, which disqualified the J9/10 as potential origins for the J-20.
You ignore a long list of jet fighters used tailles delta layout include Rafale, Eurofighter Typhoon, JAS 39 Gripen, and J-10!
That is why I used the words 'influences like' with a few examples that spans manufacturers. There is no need to give the complete list. A few examples should be enough to give the readers -- including you -- that I am aware of that long list.
I believe everyone can find the obvious common features between J-10 and J-20. J-20 is basically a twin-engine J-10 with low RCS features. They both use the tailless delta-canard wing planform. Why do you think the designers of Chengdu would abandoned their experience on J-10 for a Mig prototype that they did not know anything?
Why do you guys keep avoiding using Marty's comparison method on the Chinese jets ? Because it would disqualify the Chinese sources as 'inspiration' or 'derived from'.
Note that you said:
J-20 is basically a twin-engine J-10 with low RCS features.
Why not '
J-20 is basically a MIG 1.44 with low RCS features' ?
Why not
BOTH ?
The J-9 never flew, but experience on that were transferred to the J-10. So why is it so improbable that Chengdu used the MIG 1.44 as 'inspiration' for the J-20 ? Because they never got their hands on the MIG ?
That last question has
NEVER been a legitimate argument in engineering.
NEVER. If you try to pull that argument -- even in an academic setting -- the prof would laugh you out of his class, let alone trying it in a roomful of working engineers, which am willing to bet none of you have ever been in that working environment.
When you see someone did something that worked, you do not need access to that something in order for you to try that design on your own project. The other guy already did much of the hard work of design form and demonstrator modeling. Access to his product would give accelerated progress to
HIS design in your lab, but not necessarily to yours. However, if both his and your final goals are similar, if not outright identical, then using his design would give accelerated progress to yours.
https://www.defensetech.org/2011/08/19/did-the-j-20-come-from-this-mig/
...Russian defense sources are saying that design data and parts from the MiG 1.44 were indeed used in the design of the J-20.
...not clear whether such a transfer of technology had been legal.
You really think the few Americans on this forum are unique in believing that Chengdu got their mitts at least on those
design data from the MIG 1.44 ? You are talking about speculations from technical experts, the kind that none of you Chinese on this forum knows about, from non-technical people but who specializes in reporting in the aviation fields, and from the gamut that ranges in between the two groups.
What kind of 'design data' ?
How about wind tunnel results that tells the differences between placements of the vertical stabs, for just one example ? In aerodynamics, the difference of a few mm can mean life or death, or a couple of degrees of angle-of-attack advantages, or a slimmer profile that can give the design a few extra knots of airspeed.
Data are much more easily transferable than the physical product. Forget parts. I want data, especially data that proved a design variant
FAILED. I want failure data. Supposedly, Thomas Edison said he did not fail 1,000 times but found 999 ways that did not work. So if the other guy's data showed me that moving the vertical stabs 10 mm more outboards and angle it 5 deg less vertical to have a certain AOA achievement, why do I need access to his physical product ? I have the resources -- the wind tunnel -- to prove his failure and success data.
The J-9/10 do not have twin vertical stabs. The MIG 1.44 do. Low radar observable designs demands either no vertical stabs ( B-2 ) or twin canted ones. So if Chengdu have the design data for the MIG 1.44 with its twin vertical stabs, why should they used the J-9/10 as references ? The aerodynamics data for twin vertical stabs are there. All Chengdu had to do was test the slant degrees and move the stabs' location. We can get a little more in-depth by adding the vertical stabs' dimensions and shaping that would affect their locations and cant degrees, but the point is made: If Chengdu has the technical data for the MIG 1.44, why should they use the J-9/10 as references ?
The insistent demand that Chengdu
MUST have physical access to the MIG 1.44 is absurd in the face of engineering experience that spans time and geography. Currently, I am in the semiconductor industry and is directly involved in Intel's new NVM technology that
WILL displace NAND as the memory of choice. Prior to public release of the technology for review, which have been overwhelmingly favorable, we are more protective of data than we are of the product. Data of recipes and processing, of successful and failed variants of those recipes and processes, and from the data, the equipment used would be inferred, and everything would give our competitors 10 yrs of hard earned experience. Now that the product is out for review, Samsung and other competitors have bought it and deprocessed the product, but even so, we are still extremely protective of those data.
Of course Russia and China will deny any chance of data exchanged, legally or illegally. Unlike commercial products where I can sue my competitors if I can prove that they -- thru their deprocessing methods -- copied my product and used it in theirs, no country can sue other countries when it comes to military hardware. Who can enforce any judgement ? Chengdu is not going to admit to having the MIG's data. But we know better, do we ?
I also not said F-16 was the successor of Hawker P.1121.
You said -- that I said the F-15 and MIG-25 were 'successors' of the A-5, which I never used the word 'successor'. So when you brought on the F-16 and the Hawker P.1121, pretty much you implied the F-16 is such a 'successor'.
I know how USAF adjust their requirement on F-XX project. I just said "British Hawker P.1121 really looks similar like F-16. Base on your standard, it hinted at GD referenced it when they design F-16."
Fine, then apply that to the J-20 and the MIG 1.44. But if you do not agree, then you agree that the F-15SE did not came from the original F-15, correct ? Say it for the record.
Of course, the designer of J-20 need precendent.
Which is/are ? Remember Marty's post 33...
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/chengdu-j-9.528464/page-3#post-10040971
If you insist that we disqualify the MIG 1.44, then you must disqualify
ALL Chinese sources based upon Marty's method of comparison. But if you do so, then you must agree that the J-20 sprang from nothing, which no engineer would concur.
Marty -- not I -- put you in that bind.