Abingdonboy
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The Chinese have no histroy of carrier aviation and went after the heavy weight Su-33's blueprints a) because they were to hand (Ukrane had them, MiG-29K was undevloped at that time) and b) this is what Russia had been using for its carriers in the past.could this be a silly question by me, if mig 29 k is much potent for naval fighter jet,then why chinese didnt reverse engineered it for its carrier operations??
Whilst the IN who has extensive carrier knowledge opted for the medium weight MiG-29K and funded its development, the Russian Navy has now followed the IN's lead and have ditched the Su-33 for their carriers and are going for the MiG-29K.
A heavy weight fighter on a medium size carrier operted by a navy with no carrier expereince and with little external aid is going to see a lot of tragedies for the PLA(N) before they get it right. They are still at the VERY early stages of operationalising the Liáoníng, it will be at least another 3-4 years before they are anywhere near ready to deploy with it and that is on the optimisitic side. The Chinese are fighting two fires simultaneously- not only do they have zero carrier experience but because they stole the designs for the J-15 (Su-33) they will have no help from the OEM so it is a very very steep curve for them to climb.
The IN on the other hand has decades of expereince in this arena and the benefit of being able to lean on experts from Russia and the US- the end result being that today the INS Vikramditya is 100% operational.
I don't know the exact differential in payload capabilties of a ramp launch vs a catapult launch but there will be quite a sizeable one. When using a ramp the fighter is using nothing but its own power to launch and that too from a very short runway, a catapult offsets this greatly with addtional kinetic energy imparted by a catapult. As a result it is a no-brainer that fighters taking off from CATOBAR carriers will do so whilst being heavier than those on STOBAR carriers.View attachment 286485
It is very exciting to see the MiG-29 line continue to evolve and thrive.
@Abingdonboy I might sound stupid but I want to know what type of actual payload and range envelopes these machines can achieve when working off of ski-jump equipped aircraft carriers and is it any different from the catapult ones???
(I know that we haven't switched to catapults and ergo the doubt).
That said, the issues with payload can be offset somewhat by taking off with minimal fuel but "fat" on ordinance and being filled up by a "buddy" in the air via IFR:
On the other hand, catapult launches allow for taking off with "fat" payloads and heavy with fuel- win-win.