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Chinese Flanker Family: J-11, J-16 ... Su-27SK/UBK, Su-30MKK

J-16D

The latest images (December 2015) suggested that an EW Wild Weasel variant of J-16 (J-16D?) in the same class of American EA-18G flew for the first time on December 18, 2015 at SAC. The aircraft features a pair of large wingtip ESM/ELINT pods similar to the AN/ALQ-218 tactical jamming receiver onboard EA-18G. It also has multiple antennas mounted on its fuselage including one on the side of engine intake, one behind the cockpit, one underneath the cockpit plus a rectangular dielectric panel behind the radome. A shorter radome on the nose suggests it might be equipped with a new AESA radar with integrated EW capabilities similar to AN/APG-79. As a dedicated EW aircraft, J-16D can fly fast and maneuverably enough to escort the fighter/fighter bomber formation and clear the pathway for the air strike with YJ-91 as well as the new generation of ARMs (e.g. LD-10, CM-102). However, its windshield IRST/LR system and the starboard 30mm gun for dogfight appear to have been removed to create room for extra electronics. As the result J-16D might rely solely on AAMs for self-defence.

J-16D1.jpg

J-16D_pod.jpg

J-16D2.jpg


Chinese Military Aviation: Attack Aircraft I
It can fire laser gun, you might be surprised.
 
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I‘m reallly proud that the EW equipments of J16D are come from the company which i work for.
SWIEE(Southwest China Research Institute of Electronic Equipment ),
i.e,No.29 institute of CETC,located in Chengdu city
The prime EW equipments provider of PLAAF\PLA army:yahoo:
 
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I‘m reallly proud that the EW equipments of J16D are come from the company which i work for.
SWIEE(Southwest China Research Institute of Electronic Equipment ),
i.e,No.29 institute of CETC,located in Chengdu city
The prime EW equipments provider of PLAAF\PLA army:yahoo:

Isn't this supposed to be classified infomation?
 
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I‘m reallly proud that the EW equipments of J16D are come from the company which i work for.
SWIEE(Southwest China Research Institute of Electronic Equipment ),
i.e,No.29 institute of CETC,located in Chengdu city
The prime EW equipments provider of PLAAF\PLA army:yahoo:

Make sure that the computer you use to go online doesn't contain any sensitive info. :cheers:
 
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main_p1646402.jpg

A new electronic warfare variant of the SAC J-16 reportedly first flew on 18 December 2015. Source: Via Chinese Internet
A possible new electronic warfare (EW) variant of the Shenyang Aircraft Corporation (SAC) J-16 twin-seat strike fighter made its first flight on 18 December, according to Chinese sources, potentially adding a significant offensive capability to the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF).

Images of the new variant have emerged on several Chinese military web pages, including a 21 December 2015 video report on the popular Ifeng web page. The most salient modifications are two new wingtip pods similar to the Northrop Grumman AN/ALQ-218 Tactical Jamming Receiver, leading to comparisons with the E/A-18G Growler electronic attack variant of Boeing's Super Hornet.

This possible J-16 EW prototype appears to lack the usual fuselage-mounted gun and the infrared search and tracking system (IRST) also appears to be missing, but the J-16, which resembles the Russian Sukhoi Su-30, would have up to 10 wing and fuselage hardpoints for ordnance and active jamming pods.

p1646403.jpg
A close-up of the new electronic warfare pod on the wingtips of the SAC J-16 shows a similarity to the Northrop Grumman AN/ALQ-218 Tactical Jamming Receiver. (Via Ifeng web page)

The PLA is known to have developed three tactical electronic warfare pods. The first, similar in size to the EDO Corporation AN/ALQ-99, may come in receiver and transmitter versions and was first seen on Xian Aircraft Corporation JH-7 strike fighters in 2007. A smaller KG600 pod also equips JH-7s, while the KG300 appears to be an export variant.

An EW version of the J-16 equipped similarly to the E/A-18G would give PLAAF strike packages a far greater chance of reaching their targets and avoiding increasingly capable air defences.

Development of a J-16 EW variant could also lead to a similar carrier warfare version of the twin-seat J-15S.

Chinese commentators note that, just as the Growler enables US air forces, an active jamming version of the J-16 would allow the PLAAF to decrease its dependence on large and vulnerable electronic support aircraft based on the Shaanxi Y-8 airframe.

While in early 2014 an Asian government source estimated that 100 J-16s would be in PLA service by 2020, the emergence of an EW version could increase that number.

Want to read more? For analysis on this article and access to all our insight content, please enquire about our subscription options ihs.com/contact




(348 words)

Possible J-16 EW variant makes its first flight | IHS Jane's 360

@MastanKhan @Khafee
 
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main_p1646402.jpg

A new electronic warfare variant of the SAC J-16 reportedly first flew on 18 December 2015. Source: Via Chinese Internet
A possible new electronic warfare (EW) variant of the Shenyang Aircraft Corporation (SAC) J-16 twin-seat strike fighter made its first flight on 18 December, according to Chinese sources, potentially adding a significant offensive capability to the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF).

Images of the new variant have emerged on several Chinese military web pages, including a 21 December 2015 video report on the popular Ifeng web page. The most salient modifications are two new wingtip pods similar to the Northrop Grumman AN/ALQ-218 Tactical Jamming Receiver, leading to comparisons with the E/A-18G Growler electronic attack variant of Boeing's Super Hornet.

This possible J-16 EW prototype appears to lack the usual fuselage-mounted gun and the infrared search and tracking system (IRST) also appears to be missing, but the J-16, which resembles the Russian Sukhoi Su-30, would have up to 10 wing and fuselage hardpoints for ordnance and active jamming pods.

p1646403.jpg
A close-up of the new electronic warfare pod on the wingtips of the SAC J-16 shows a similarity to the Northrop Grumman AN/ALQ-218 Tactical Jamming Receiver. (Via Ifeng web page)

The PLA is known to have developed three tactical electronic warfare pods. The first, similar in size to the EDO Corporation AN/ALQ-99, may come in receiver and transmitter versions and was first seen on Xian Aircraft Corporation JH-7 strike fighters in 2007. A smaller KG600 pod also equips JH-7s, while the KG300 appears to be an export variant.

An EW version of the J-16 equipped similarly to the E/A-18G would give PLAAF strike packages a far greater chance of reaching their targets and avoiding increasingly capable air defences.

Development of a J-16 EW variant could also lead to a similar carrier warfare version of the twin-seat J-15S.

Chinese commentators note that, just as the Growler enables US air forces, an active jamming version of the J-16 would allow the PLAAF to decrease its dependence on large and vulnerable electronic support aircraft based on the Shaanxi Y-8 airframe.

While in early 2014 an Asian government source estimated that 100 J-16s would be in PLA service by 2020, the emergence of an EW version could increase that number.

Want to read more? For analysis on this article and access to all our insight content, please enquire about our subscription options ihs.com/contact




(348 words)

Possible J-16 EW variant makes its first flight | IHS Jane's 360


@Zarvan can you please collect and select important information about all the SU-27 Variants which are made in China (please with Pictures of all varaints) and explain us what are their differences in the variants and their role in the Chinese air force (also the numbers which are in Service ...and where the squadrons are stationed, if it is possible show that by a map ) ? That would be a very interesting topic to write for you and to read for all the PDF members !
 
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@Zarvan can you please collect and select important information about all the SU-27 Variants which are made in China (please with Pictures of all varaints) and explain us what are their differences in the variants and their role in the Chinese air force (also the numbers which are in Service ...and where the squadrons are stationed, if ist possible show that by a map ) ? That would be a very interesting topic to write for you and to read for all the PDF members !
I will try but a thread is already running by the name of J-11 Family
 
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@Zarvan can you please collect and select important information about all the SU-27 Variants which are made in China (please with Pictures of all varaints) and explain us what are their differences in the variants and their role in the Chinese air force (also the numbers which are in Service ...and where the squadrons are stationed, if ist possible show that by a map ) ? That would be a very interesting topic to write for you and to read for all the PDF members !

Family tree:
  • J-11A
  • J-11B
    • J-11BS
    • J-11BH
    • J-11BSH
    • J-15
      • J-15S
    • J-16
      • J-16D
    • J-11D
The J-15 and J-16 can technically be considered a class of their own, but they all extend from the J-11B lineage.

Which specific variant are you referring to?
 
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Family tree:
  • J-11A
  • J-11B
    • J-11BS
    • J-11BH
    • J-11BSH
    • J-15
      • J-15S
    • J-16
      • J-16D
    • J-11D
The J-15 and J-16 can technically be considered a class of their own, but they all extend from the J-11B lineage.

Which specific variant are you referring to?

To All my friend, I want now why China has made so many different variants and whats their exact role related to their Mission area !
 
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Family tree:
  • J-11A
  • J-11B
    • J-11BS
    • J-11BH
    • J-11BSH
    • J-15
      • J-15S
    • J-16
      • J-16D
    • J-11D
The J-15 and J-16 can technically be considered a class of their own, but they all extend from the J-11B lineage.

Which specific variant are you referring to?
Some people suggest as J series are copy of Russian Planes therefore China can't sell them to other countries
 
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Some people suggest as J series are copy of Russian Planes therefore China can't sell them to other countries

The J-11X series use a Russian-derived airframe, but all of the subsystems and weapons used aboard these aircraft are completely Chinese-developed and unique to the variant (except for the J-11A). That is one of the reasons why the Chinese continue to develop and produce them.

The Chinese are probably not legally-bound from selling them, but they've agreed to refrain from exporting the J-11X in order to maintain cordiality with Moscow.

To All my friend, I want now why China has made so many different variants and whats their exact role related to their Mission area !

J-11B: air superiority
J-15: carrier-based multirole fighter
J-16: strike fighter
J-11D: air superiority

Types of variants explained here Shenyang J-11 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Now we also have the J-16 EW

Wikipedia is the last source you would want to use.
 
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