Two points I wanted to bring to notice of gambit
1) LPI mode on Raptor:
The radar range using LPI mode may be halved, so not the full power of AESA, meaning it brings the Raptor closer to the PAK-FA, where if you believe that the 3D TVC has an advantage, then it negates the LPI advantage (if the enemy is using its AESA or L-band). Plausible?
Not at all.
First...The superiority of 3D thrust vectoring over 2D have yet to be established. The US is not inexperienced in this technology. The F-22's 2D TV coupled with its flight control system have been deemed sufficient.
Second...Fighters do not have all-around radar coverage. At best, they have warning receivers for those areas that are not covered by an active radar system, which pretty much mean most of the area surrounding an aircraft. In a fight, you win not by fighting under your opponent's rules but by forcing him to fight under yours. So if the F-22 is able to approach his opponent without detection in any way, that 3D TV advantage, assuming there is one, is already worthless. The point is to put yourself in as an advantageous position as soon as possible the moment you detect your opponent, and if he fail to detect your presence, all the better.
2) Regarding the AIM-9x which the thread details for closer engagement using its IR, doesnt the IRST help in negating that?
Not sure what you are asking here. IR Search and Track does not negate but assist in finding and focusing on a target in the infrared regime.
Regarding the ability of the aircraft to counter the 50G pulling maneuvering and escape, I rely on your post on the Brahmos countering where you suggest that the terminal phase of stabilization does not allow any deviation from path. (Although this seems counter-intuitive after observing the video Thomas posted, where an AIM-9x shoots down a flare releasing aircraft).
The terminal phase of any missile, as in duration, is highly dependent upon the hardware's capability. By hardware I mean the physical flight control system, not the virtual flight control laws. As the two bodies approaches each other, there comes a point in time where the missile designer determine that based upon the available hardware for him, the missile should no longer maneuver regardless of external circumstances. That mark the beginning of the terminal phase. With increasing sophistication, the terminal phase duration gets shorter, making missiles more lethal with higher assurances of a hit.
You also mention that chaff can create a cloud that can mask any signatures from a battleship. Flankers should also be able to do this ruse then and escape if the logic holds true.
These are just couple of discrepancies I thought I would like you to clarify.
Chaff have always been with us and their successes in air combat history still assured their deployment for a very long time. The problem with chaff is that they have different flight characteristics than the aircraft so if the missile is sufficiently sophisticated in avionics, the odds of distinguishing chaff from aircraft increases. However, this ability to distinguish aircraft from chaff depend on if the missile is able to have even sporadic contact with the target in order to establish a difference in flight characteristics. This is applicable to both radar and IR.
Here is what could happen: A fighter established a radar lock on his opponent, at this point, if his opponent dispense chaff to confuse his radar focus and is successful, no missile should be fired. However, if his opponent was unaware until after the missile was fired, at this point, the aircraft's and the missile's radars have an established radar characteristics of a target and if chaff is dispensed and even if the chaff is totally blanketing the missile's radar point-of-view, the missile will ignore the moving EM field that has no semblance to what is in its memory, fly through the chaff cloud, and will attempt to reacquire the target based upon that memory.
That is why an aircraft usually execute violent maneuvers after chaff dispense in the hope that he will be out of the missile's radar POV in the event a missile was launched and the missile broke through the chaff cloud.