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J-20 Mighty Dragon production likely to ramp up as China aims to have more stealth fighters than US by 2025
By Dario Leone
Oct 11 2021
According to comments released at the recent Zhuhai air show (Airshow China 2021) by J-20 program officials the production of the J-20 Mighty Dragon, touted by China as a stealth fighter, will likely increase. However, production ramp rates were not disclosed.
As reported by Air Force Magazine, some 15 J-20s flew in formation at Zhuhai, which took place in late September and early October, and observers reported an additional group of the aircraft parked on the runway.
Chinese industry can “satisfy any level of demand from the People’s Liberation Army Air Force [PLAAF] for the Mighty Dragon,” J-20 deputy designer Wang Hitao explained to Global Times, a state-run news organization.
Although advanced aircraft development usually takes a long time, Wang said that “particularly for equipment like the J-20, we need to do it faster in all aspects, including designing, production, testing, and crafting.” Global Times reported that Wang said the fighter has turned in “outstanding” performance in stealth, sensors, and firepower.
As already reported, the PLAAF showcased J-20 Mighty Dragon stealth fighter jets fitted with domestically produced WS-10C engines at the Zhuhai Airshow. This represents a significant milestone as Beijing pushes the capabilities of its J-20 aircraft in a bid to rival the US Air Force (USAF) F-22.
Moreover, Sun Cong, chief designer of the FC-31 (aka J-31), deployed on carriers—an F-35 lookalike—told Global Times that “people will … see good news on the next-generation aircraft carrier-based fighter jet” in the coming year.
“Our commanders tell us that by 2025, the Chinese will have more fifth-generation stealth fighters on the front line than we do,” US Senate Armed Services Committee ranking member James Inhofe (R-Okla.) said in a confirmation hearing Oct. 5, 2021. A spokesperson for Inhofe said the information was based on testimony provided by US Indo-Pacific Command’s commander, now-retired Adm. Philip Davidson, during a March posture testimony.
According to the South China Morning Post, another state-run media outlet, China fields 150 J-20s in four air regiments, most operating in the interior of the country, which are reportedly dedicated to training and tactics development.
China would have to build 500 fifth-generation J-20s and FC-31s between now and 2025, or 125 aircraft per year to match just the USAF—not counting Navy and Marine Corps inventories.
The peak production of the F-35 Lightning II will occur in 2023, at a rate of 156 aircraft per year, and stay at that level “for the foreseeable future,” Lockheed Martin and the F-35 Joint Program Office announced just before Airshow China 2021. That figure will, however, meet the demands of more than a dozen partners and foreign military sales customers.
For calendar 2021, Lockheed Martin plans to deliver 133-139 F-35s, ramping up to 151-153 of the aircraft in 2022.
On Sep. 29 Wang Wei, the Deputy Air Force commander of the PLAAF, issued a veiled challenge that if the US is not scared of China’s advanced weapons “let us meet in the sky.”
Wei referenced comments about China that USAF Secretary Frank Kendall made in August. Kendall said during an interview with Defense News that the focus of the USAF should be to stay ahead of China’s military technological developments to continue to field the types of weapons that “scare China.”
Above: FC-31/J-31 “F-35 lookalike” stealth fighter. Top image: J-20 Mighty Dragons.
By Dario Leone
Oct 11 2021
According to comments released at the recent Zhuhai air show (Airshow China 2021) by J-20 program officials the production of the J-20 Mighty Dragon, touted by China as a stealth fighter, will likely increase. However, production ramp rates were not disclosed.
As reported by Air Force Magazine, some 15 J-20s flew in formation at Zhuhai, which took place in late September and early October, and observers reported an additional group of the aircraft parked on the runway.
Chinese industry can “satisfy any level of demand from the People’s Liberation Army Air Force [PLAAF] for the Mighty Dragon,” J-20 deputy designer Wang Hitao explained to Global Times, a state-run news organization.
Although advanced aircraft development usually takes a long time, Wang said that “particularly for equipment like the J-20, we need to do it faster in all aspects, including designing, production, testing, and crafting.” Global Times reported that Wang said the fighter has turned in “outstanding” performance in stealth, sensors, and firepower.
As already reported, the PLAAF showcased J-20 Mighty Dragon stealth fighter jets fitted with domestically produced WS-10C engines at the Zhuhai Airshow. This represents a significant milestone as Beijing pushes the capabilities of its J-20 aircraft in a bid to rival the US Air Force (USAF) F-22.
Moreover, Sun Cong, chief designer of the FC-31 (aka J-31), deployed on carriers—an F-35 lookalike—told Global Times that “people will … see good news on the next-generation aircraft carrier-based fighter jet” in the coming year.
“Our commanders tell us that by 2025, the Chinese will have more fifth-generation stealth fighters on the front line than we do,” US Senate Armed Services Committee ranking member James Inhofe (R-Okla.) said in a confirmation hearing Oct. 5, 2021. A spokesperson for Inhofe said the information was based on testimony provided by US Indo-Pacific Command’s commander, now-retired Adm. Philip Davidson, during a March posture testimony.
According to the South China Morning Post, another state-run media outlet, China fields 150 J-20s in four air regiments, most operating in the interior of the country, which are reportedly dedicated to training and tactics development.
China would have to build 500 fifth-generation J-20s and FC-31s between now and 2025, or 125 aircraft per year to match just the USAF—not counting Navy and Marine Corps inventories.
The peak production of the F-35 Lightning II will occur in 2023, at a rate of 156 aircraft per year, and stay at that level “for the foreseeable future,” Lockheed Martin and the F-35 Joint Program Office announced just before Airshow China 2021. That figure will, however, meet the demands of more than a dozen partners and foreign military sales customers.
For calendar 2021, Lockheed Martin plans to deliver 133-139 F-35s, ramping up to 151-153 of the aircraft in 2022.
On Sep. 29 Wang Wei, the Deputy Air Force commander of the PLAAF, issued a veiled challenge that if the US is not scared of China’s advanced weapons “let us meet in the sky.”
Wei referenced comments about China that USAF Secretary Frank Kendall made in August. Kendall said during an interview with Defense News that the focus of the USAF should be to stay ahead of China’s military technological developments to continue to field the types of weapons that “scare China.”
Above: FC-31/J-31 “F-35 lookalike” stealth fighter. Top image: J-20 Mighty Dragons.
J-20 Mighty Dragon production likely to ramp up as China aims to have more stealth fighters than US by 2025 - The Aviation Geek Club
J-20 Mighty Dragon production likely to ramp up as China aims to have more stealth fighters than US by 2025
theaviationgeekclub.com