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China's sixth-generation fighter aircraft

you attached the picture of
China SUPERSONIC drone 'Dark Sword'
but this is not China's sixth generation fighter's picture

Original Article has it.
Not me who pasted it.
Open the link of the article and see the same photo.
 
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I have not disputed your claim of this fighter picture to be that of a drone.

So why are you in a rage to display 3 links in a jiffy?
 
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I have not disputed your claim of this fighter picture to be that of a drone.So why are you in a rage to display 3 links in a jiffy?
what rage ???
only for correction of your post.
 
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Jules Verner writes From the Earth to the Moon since 1865, a century before the American actually land on the Moon.
Archimede "eureka" for more ambitious idea.

We could always study, but before we have enough resources.

A good rocket, a good engine ... everything still in the novel !!!

We could always want to do something in our life.



View attachment 159637
You really don't know the meaning of research in minitary science.Most minitary plan is formulated decade years ago.The based technologies of six generation plane has been nearly mature.Whether the Chinese six generation plane become true,we will make progress in aircraft industry 。
And 100 years from the science fiction to reality action is not so long.
The problems are money,science studys and time.We have these elements and the demand for national security.So it's not surprise at all.
We Chinese never want to speak loud and do nothing as some countries' politician.
 
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You really don't know the meaning of research in minitary science.Most minitary plan is formulated decade years ago.The based technologies of six generation plane has been nearly mature.
100 years fr the science fiction to

You may be right. I'm surprised that secret revealed by a Russian with wrong image posting.
 
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There is a part left out in the OP which says:

"China's next fighter is likely to be an unmanned aerial vehicle, said Korochenko.

While the definition of a "sixth-generation" is not clear yet, most believe such an aircraft will be equipped with a laser or railgun."


See the comments from some of the Indians there contrary to ridiculous Indian trolls:

Sandip Das18 hours ago
We will go on laughing now and China will have the last laugh. Or we can stop laughing, sit up, do some serious rethinking and without much delay develop our AMCA with some 6th generation elements thrown in like Fly-by-Light, Super computing processors, enhanced data fusion, and next generation engines with the help of Israel. Maybe China's program is just a hype, as they do not have next generation engines, but few years ago people thought china developing 5th gen planes was preposterous. They are not laughing now

mani82 Sandip Das18 hours ago
AMCA has not left drawing board yet these quota scientist PSU'S HAL and DRDO are useless

Sandip Das mani8218 hours ago

Exactly, with this pace of development and chalta hai attitude, we will never become a power to reckon with. All DRDO R&D is based of duplicating or reworking systems others have already developed. There is no ground-breaking research going on. I had seen a Discovery Channel feature on B-2 spirit bombers and a scientist had said that there were so many inventions made that it could be shown as one invention per day over a period of 17 years (the time it took B-2 to go from paper to the skies). We never find this kind of commitment from DRDO and HAL scientists. They should look at their ISRO counterparts .

Mridul baruah Sandip Das15 hours ago
Well said. China is increasing the gap...they are competing with USA and we are content competing with Pakistan.


Have you inducted the LCA yet?

Oh, that is embarrassing. 8-)
 
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You may be right. I'm surprised that secret revealed by a Russian with wrong image posting.
China has so much cooperation with Russia in aircraft industry.Russian media usually enjoy releasing some news about China.
But never release minitary plan before real demand" is Chinese officer's custom.
 
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ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
 
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ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?
ENGINE ?

The engine problem will be solved in due time。

6th generation fighters are at least a decade or two away from today。

Who knows,6th gen jets might be powered by new concept engines。:D
China claims over half the world's Q3 tech IPOs: PwC
Summary: China claimed more than half of the world's technology initial public offerings during the third quarter of 2014, according to new research by PricewaterhouseCoopers.

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By Leon Spencer | November 14, 2014 -- 01:37 GMT (17:37 PST)

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TOPICS: Tech Industry, China, Australia
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By Leon Spencer | November 14, 2014 -- 01:37 GMT (17:37 PST)

The historic initial public offering (IPO) of China's Alibaba Group on the New York Stock Exchange in September has resulted in the People's Republic dominating the technology IPO market in the third quarter of 2014, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).

The PwC Global Technology IPO review (PDF) for Q3 2014 has revealed that China also claimed more than half of the world's technology IPOs for the quarter, with Chinese companies comprising 56 percent of the global total.

According to the PwC research, 10 Chinese technology companies floated publicly during the quarter, with Alibaba Group's AU$25 billion IPO — the largest ever — on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in September overshadowing the global total.

After China, the US posted two technology IPOs, and New Zealand and Luxembourg claimed one deal each, with New Zealand film distribution software provider Vista Group listing on the New Zealand Securities Exchange, and Luxembourg-based software company Globant listing on the NYSE.

Meanwhile, Australia saw the Australian Securities Exchange IPO of salary packaging administration and fleet management services company Smartgroup Corporation.

According to the report, cross-border IPOs — one of which was Alibaba Group's NYSE listing — rose slightly compared to the previous quarter, to 33 percent. Of the six cross-border IPOs, two were from China, three were from Israel, and one was from Luxembourg.

The NYSE and the tech-focused NASDAQ exchanges were primary targets for cross-border IPOs during the period, along with the London Stock Exchange's AIM sub-market.

Internet software and services ranked as the most active sub-sectors for technology IPOs in the three-month period, raising $22.8 billion in total, with PwC counting Alibaba's first trading day IPO tally of $21.8 billion, rather than the $25 billion it hit after underwriters exercised an option to purchase additional shares.

The internet software and services sub-sectors saw a steady rise from 44 percent of the technology total in 2011 to 67 percent of the industry IPOs for the latest quarter. Thanks to the Alibaba IPO, the internet software and services sectors claimed 92 percent of the total.

Meanwhile, rising demand for wearables, smart devices, and mobile solutions is also increasing the demand for specialised semiconductor components. The semiconductor sub-sector had four Chinese IPOs, raising $533 million, compared to $418 million in Q2 2014, a 28 percent increase in proceeds quarter over quarter with the same number of deals.

All in all, PwC estimates that global technology IPOs for Q3 2014 set a record, at $24.8 billion in total, surpassing the previous quarterly record of $17.8 billion, raised in the second quarter of 2012 following Facebook's $16 billion IPO.

Eighteen companies from six different countries completed their IPOs in the third quarter of the year, reflecting a 50 percent year-on-year increase in volume.

However, US technology company IPOs declined significantly during the quarter, according to PwC, with only two companies from the US listing during the period, compared to 14 during the previous quarter.
 
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Better China would try to produce aircraft with supercruise speed Mach 2 first.

View attachment 159643

I hope Chinese engineers at Shenyang and Chengdu are reading this post for the valuable insight it offers. Not often does China get the chance to benefit from Vietnam's extensive aerospace experience. Please do go on. What else should China try to produce?
 
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