I am agreeing with you. I got the higher TWR from a PAF pilot in 2010. I had asked about the engine thrust but he quoted me the TWR.
We have F16 as the target to be reached
Dear sir,
Mig 19's Farmer designation is nato designation, and has no whatsoever bearing on the logic you presented.... all fighters from western bloc had F designation(fishbed, flanker, frogfoot), all bombers had start with B (Bear, beagle, bat etc) , Helos with H (Hind, hip, ), Commercial a/c with C, A2A missiles with A(Atoll. alamo, adder), S2A missiles with G (gadfly, gecko,grizly), Air to Surface with K (Krypton, kayak, kingbolt) etc
It's russian nick name was Utkanos which means Duck nose.
I know. F fighter. Etc. But the Russian planes were meant to be maintained by farmers. Educated masses were enemy of the communism. Yet one needed huge numbers of fighterjets to defend the nation. That means one needs planes that are rugged. Land on bad airfields and use the worst quality of fuel. And indeed. If you could repair a tractor... You could do the same to a Mig... I hope that explains my answer a bit more. One needs to search on the net to find the same but I hope this settles. It is still the design philosophy of Russian planes. The Frogfoot can handle Vodka... Diesel and a lot more. Look at the landing gears of Russian planes... Compare that with F16 or F15. The Mig29 shuts of its intakes on the ground. No need to clean the area. The F16 needs a vacuum cleaner before the engine can start...
or the multiple launch rail that can carry 2 SD-10 on one hard point.
However if they can add another hard point under belly somewhere behind cockpit that will be idea as then that can carry targeting POD or any supporting equipment and leave the original 7 hard points for missiles and fuel tanks/bombs!
At the moment the JF17 can guide two SD10 at the same time. This will be increased in the next block. So one can have more SD10 going after enemy without bugging out.
Nope. you are still as amusing as you were earlier. Thanks for obliging......................with such an imaginatively amusing explanation...........as the earlier one for the "Farmer" moniker for the MiG.
Now; pray do tell us where the "Faggot" name for another SU war-plane came from?
Not by Russians. Here the explanation...
NATA designated new Soviet fighters with "F" code names. Fencer, foxhout, foxbat etc etc etc.
I think you have confused fagot: NOUN:
A bundle of twigs, sticks, or branches bound together.
A bundle of pieces of iron or steel to be welded or hammered into bars.
Middle English, from Old French, from Old Provençal, possibly from Vulgar Latin *facus, from Greek phakelos, bundle
With faggot which a variant of the same word and can be used as derogatory term. in addition to being used as above.