DESERT FIGHTER
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And you think Pakistan's F-16s are not downgraded?
Like what? Avionics?JHMS?engine?radar? Pod?EW suite?
Certain systems on the Mig-29 will always be downgraded or removed altogether but in the case of India, India always receives the better versions compared with other countries mostly because the Arabs have a history of defectons and letting westerners inspect their aircraft. In fact India operates some of the most advanced aircraft in the world because they have the option of integrating, French, Israeli, or their own avionics, along with the Russian ones that come with the aircraft all of this is possible through open architecture as well as Russia's willingness to allow it, and of course only privileged countries are sold Israli and French systems. Pakistan was denied French avionics.
?LOL.... seriously thts your excuse? take a look at Saddams Airforce... he could have bought anything in the world...and was anti America , Or ...even the Yugos-serbs during the time... your excuse in invalid!
As for avionics in indian migs... no other country including USA,EU guys are cool with foreign buyers modifying or replacing systems in their product... There is a reason for it..
Also what abt the faulty missiles,krasnopol,bursting T-72s... faullty smirchs etc..etc?
Soviets were known to prefer quantity over quality!
As for Pakistan and Spectra upgrade... view the related thread!
And your point is......?
Just bursting your false claims abt your "precieved" mighty migs!
.You are very dishonest and have tendencies of making claims without verification. The E-3 flew 5,052 hours during Desert storm, do the math, the air campaign only lasted about a month. Moreover, 38 of 41 aircraft that were destroyed during Desert Storm were aided with AWACs. Yugoslovia also involved 4,800 flight hours from AWACs. AWACs aircraft detect targets for other aircraft well before those aircraft can themselves detect them. This means that without AWACs Iraqi aircraft could have flew right up to NATO aircraft and fired at them without the NATO aircraft ever knowing that the Iraqis were there. Yet the opposite occurred, AWACs vectored NATO aircraft to the best possible attack position to Stay out of Iraqi radar, in essence in Iraqis didn't know they were being detected
Iraqis also had AWACs... etc... anyways... the Yugo mig-29s were shot down in Bosnian territory... Serb pilots navi systems were experiencing troubles not radar.... also the Dutch F-16 shot him... without Sentry cover :
After a pause of almost a month, on 4 May finally Lt.Col. Milenko Pavlovic scrambled on MiG-29 to intercept a NATO strike in the area of Valjevo, his home-town, which the previous night was first hit by an earthquake and then by a heavy NATO-strike. Appearing too late on the scene and experiencing one malfunction of the navigation system on his aircraft after the other, Lt.Col. Pavlovic was eventually intercepted by two USAF F-16Cs. Both US fighters were flying on the end of the NATO-formation, and had to be turned around by the E-3 Sentry AWACS aircraft in order to engage – while simultaneously also attacked by the Serbian air defence units. Lt.Col. Pavlovic was shot down within a short period of time, and killed.
Both Iraqis and Serbs had BVRs... and were shot down with AIM,AMRAAMs..
What abt the African wars? same result... apart from shooting prop planes and shitty old mig-21s what did they achieve?
Apart from tht... compare the basic mig-29s to older block F-16s... in mock combat ex ... still failures?
And NATO aircraft staying outside Iraqi-29s radar range lmao.. they shot 5 Iraqi migs.. in 91.. remember?
Do some research, many countries have replaced American avionics in their F-16s such as Israel, Japan, and Turkey to an extent.
Turks only produced an IFF system not sure if they used it on their F-16s as of now) ...and also produce the jet under liscense ... F-2 again liscense produced and got help from LM...60% of F-2 produced in USA... again LM+Mitsu partnership..
Israeli "sufa" again manufactured by LM..
The Indians replace certain systems because Russia allows it, France and Isreal also allow it. If Russia said no then it wouldn't happen. It makes me wonder, do other countries allow that kind of freedom with their aircraft? Do other countries have the privilege of purchasing from France and Israel? In Pakistan's case it tried to purchase French avionics for the Rafale but was denied.
In any case, if the Indians had F-16s they would try to replace certain systems too just like many other countries have done so with the F-16.
Lmao.. which French jets system was replaced by Indians? heck they are looting Indians with the ugrade of ther mirages ...(which cost as much as the jet)... remember? just like you guys who doubled the price of their AC ?
As for JF-17 and SPECTRA upgrade yes initially we wanted tht... and the cock blocker was the indian MRCA deal....but since tht lots of things have changed and PAF is happy with the avionics which are now built by Pak+China.. apart from tht hope you know Vixen AESA was also offered to Pakistan... for more info :
JF-17 Thunder Multirole Fighter [Thread 5] | Page 123
I have read the reports and I suspect you are quoting wekepedia which has no reference. The reports I have read was that those missiles were fired out of range. We have plenty of evidence of the R-73 hitting its target on the first attempt, such incident include the Georgian UAV that filmed an R-73 destroying it. We have demonstration videos of R-73s hitting drones or other aerial targets on first attempts, ect. Even old R-60s have destroyed many aircraft.
A missile hitting it's target depends on the following:
--Range
--Vector
--Clouds
--Evasive maneuvers
--Counter measures
When the R-73 is within range, it hits it's target with a high degree of accuracy which we have video proof of.
Lmao... in Eritrean - Ethniopian conflict the missile was put to test... jets flown by Russian mercs remember? your video lmao..
Okay let's do that.
As much as your source which you quoted from a forum tries to slam the old Mig-29 and even goes as far as claiming that the F-16 is a more maneuverable platform the Mig-29 wiped the floor with the F-16. The Germans as well as the Israelis debunked much of the claims in the article. Moreover, even if we take those claims at face value, all of the issues he complained about were fixed long ago, such as pilots interface, mechanical flight controls, ect. At the end of the day, the article was a chest thumping peice written by America strong!!!
Yeah F-16.net ... the guy has 2000 hours on F-16 and 500 on mig-29... Has a Master's Degree in aerospace engineering ...
As for fixing stuff ... dude... he compared your migs to older block of F-16s not Block 52..
And the guy is a GERMAN not a MARTIAN...
As for Israeli stamp of approval... yeah ... they shot Syrian mig-29s with their F-16s aswell...
Apart from tht they also gave their "stamp of approval" to Arjun mbt... ... And we know how tht worked out don't we? with more t-90s... coupled with western imagery systems and no Shotra-1s etc...
ANOTHER NEUTRAL SOURCE:
Schlemming with the Fulcrums,
F-16/MiG-29 Training in Italy
Article by Eric Hehs
Four Cyrillic letters adorn a toggle switch in the MiG-29 cockpit. The letters spell a word that sounds like schlemm. The switch activates a helmet-mounted sight system used to designate targets for one of the most formidable air-to-air missiles any USAF fighter pilot may ever face, and actually ever face-the AA-11 Archer.
The system allows pilots the MiG-29 to shoot the thrust-vectored Archer where their planes are not pointing. With a turn of the head, they can target opposing aircraft up to forty-five degrees off the nose of the MiG. When MiG-29 pilots of Germany's Jagdgeschwader 73 (Fighter Wing 73) use the helmet-mounted sight system in simulated engagements, they call it a schlemm shot . (Not surprising, schlemm means grand slam in German.)
Only a handful of USAF fighter pilots have ever been schlemmed. Those who have, though, consider themselves lucky. They have experienced what others have only read about or encountered in simulations. With experience comes credibility. And as of last May 1995, the most credible squadron when it comes to fighting the MiG-29 is the 510th Fighter Squadron from Aviano Air Base in northern Italy.
Most people associate Aviano with Deny Flight Operations over Bosnia. Many pilots of the 510th and its sister F-16 squadron, the 555th, have been flying over Bosnia from Aviano for most three years without much attention. Until recently, that is. These days, the squadrons fly these missions for two-month shifts every six months. The units spend two of the remaining four months training at Aviano and two months deployed. On one such deployment last year to Decimomannu Air Base on the southern tip of Sardinia, Capt. Will Sparrow of the 510th learned about an upcoming German MiG-29 visit to the island. The Fulcrums, he heard, were looking for aerial adversaries. "We were on the phone about thirty seconds later getting our name on the books to come back down here," Sparrow recalled.
A few months after that call, the 510th headed back to Sardinia with ten F-16s and an able support team for a four-week MiG-29 Fest. The JG 73 sent ten Fulcrums and fifteen air-to-air German F-4Fs. The pilots flew a variety of setups, from simple one F-16 flying basic fighter maneuvers against one MiG-29, to more complex encounters of four F-16s teamed against four MiG-29s. Two F-16s also flew against two MiG-29s and two F-4Fs. 'We called that two v two plus two," explained Sparrow. "The MiGs practice a lot of tactics with the F-4s to make use of the F-4's radar."
The more complex engagements were simultaneously monitored by ground controllers who used the air combat maneuvering instrumentation facilities at Decimomannu to guide the aerial combatants. The ACMI facilities were also used by the aircrews to review the engagements. "Decimomannu is a fantastic place to train," said Sparrow, who was in charge of the deployment for the 510th. "The base has an ACMI that can't be beat for debriefing. And they have a bombing range nearby at Cappa Frasca.
"I hope this deployment receives a lot of attention because it deserves a lot," Sparrow continued. "Not because we're here, but because we're learning about aircraft very similar to the German MiGs, aircraft that could cause us a lot of problems. As for what we expected before coming down here, we would get ten different answers from ten different pilots. We've heard a lot of things about the MiG-29. We all read the same stuff and get the same information. But we never really know what to believe. We now know they are a great adversary. They were everything I expected and more. Nothing can substitute for training like this. We go out and fight ourselves a lot and we try to make those encounters as realistic as possible. But this is the real thing. And these MiG pilots are really well trained."
Germany's MiG-29 unit is based at Laage Air Base near Rostock on the Baltic coast. Before German reunification in 1990, the aircraft flew for the former East Germany and the Warsaw Pact. After reunification, the Fulcrums became a test wing for the German Air Force. In 1993, the unit became an operational wing. Its twenty-four Fulcrums and twenty-eight pilots officially became a combined wing with an F-4 unit from Pferdsfeld Air Base in 1994. The unit formally maintains an alert role and polices the air over the five republics that comprise the former East Germany. Many of Germany's MiG-29 pilots are former F-4 pilots who were trained in the United States. These pilots volunteered to convert to the Fulcrum, which currently represents the most advanced fighter in the German Luftwaffe.
The JG-73 has also retained a number of former East German MiG-29 pilots who have had to tailor their knowledge of the airplane to fit western style tactics. Most of the Fulcrum pilots have fewer than 300 hours in the aircraft. Only a few have over 400 hours. No one in the unit, including former East German pilots, has over 500 hours in the MiG-29.
This was not the JG 73's first encounter with advanced western aircraft. The wing flew against Dutch F-16s at Decimomannu last year and against Spanish F-18s for two weeks in 1993. The Germans deploy to Sardinia because the ACMI facilities are there and because air-to-air combat training is restricted over the former East Germany, which covers Laage Air Base. The restriction, however, may be dropped later this year.
"The highlight of this deployment for me has been the BFM (basic fighter maneuvering, i.e., modern dogfighting) against a clean F-16C," explained Capt. Oliver Prunk, the operations officer for JG 73. "The F-16C performs significantly better in terms of power when compared with the F-16A. I was also pleased with the proficiency of the American pilots. They take their jobs very seriously. We try to be the best adversary we can. I think they were surprised with the performance of the MiG-29 and with what we can do with it."
The most impressive aspect of the Fulcrum's performance for the American pilots was its low-speed maneuverability. "In a low-speed fight, fighting the Fulcrum is similar to fighting an F-18 Hornet," explained Capt. Mike McCoy of the 510th. "But the Fulcrum has a thrust advantage over the Hornet. An F-18 can really crank its nose around if you get into a slow-speed fight, but it has to lose altitude to regain the energy, which allows us to get on top of them. The MiG has about the same nose authority at slow speeds, but it can regain energy much faster. Plus the MiG pilots have that forty-five-degree cone in front of them into which they can fire an Archer and eat you up."
The off-boresight missile, as described in the opening scenario, proved to be a formidable threat, though not an insurmountable one. "Some of their capabilities were more wicked than we originally thought," said McCoy. "We had to respect the helmet-mounted sight, which made our decisions to anchor more difficult. In other words, when I got close in, I had to consider that helmet-mounted sight. Every time I got near a Fulcrum's nose, I was releasing flares to defeat an Archer coming off his rail."
"Before coming here, some of our pilots may have thought of the MiG's helmet-mounted sight as an end-all to a BFM fight," explained Lt. Col. Gary West, commander of the 510th. "We have found that it is not as lethal as we had expected.
We encountered some positions-particularly in an across-the-circle shot or a high-low shot and in a slow-speed fight-where a Fulcrum pilot can look up forty-five degrees and take a shot while his nose is still off. That capability has changed some of the pilots' ideas on how they should approach a MiG-29 in a neutral fight. Below 200 knots, the MiG-29 has incredible nose-pointing capability down to below 100 knots. The F-16, however, enjoys an advantage in the 200 knot-plus regime. At higher speeds, we can power above them to go to the vertical. And our turn rate is significantly better. By being patient and by keeping airspeed up around 325 knots, an F-16 can bring the MiG-29 to its nose. But the pilot must still be careful of the across-the-circle shot with that helmet-mounted sight.
"We have done very well on neutral BFM engagements," continued West. "We have tried single and two-circle fights, depending on how much lead turn we had at the merge. Without exception, we have been able to use finesse or power to an advantage after at least a couple of turns. I don't think any F-16 pilot has gotten defensive and stayed there. As always, and this applies to any airplane, success depends on who is flying."
Three pilots from the 510th received backseat rides in one of the JG-73's two-seat MiG-29 trainers. Capt. Sparrow was one of them. "The MiG is harder to fly than the F-16," said Sparrow. "The Soviet airframe is great, but the avionics are not user friendly. After flying in the backseat of the Fulcrum, I got a feel for how spoiled we are in the F-16. I always felt good about the F-16, but I wouldn't trade flying the F-16 for any other aircraft, foreign or domestic.
"The Fulcrum doesn't have the crisp movements of an F-16," Sparrow continued. "You need to be an octopus in the MiG-29 to work the avionics. Those German pilots have it tough. Just to get a simple lock on and fire a missile may take a half dozen hands-off switches or so. We can do the same with a flick of the thumb while we are looking at the HUD. F-16 pilots also have a significant sight advantage. A couple of hundred feet advantage can make a difference in air-to-air combat; the actual difference is more significant than that. MiG-29 pilots have a tough time checking their six o'clock. Their canopy rail is higher. They can lose sight of us even when flying BFM."
"Their visibility is not that good," agreed McCoy, one of the other two pilots who enjoyed a spin in the Fulcrum. "Their disadvantage is a real advantage for us. F-16 pilots sit high in the cockpit. All the MiG-29 pilots who sat in our cockpit wanted to look around with the canopy closed. They were impressed that they could turn around and look at the tail and even see the engine can."
"Besides visibility, I expected better turning performance," McCoy continued. "The MiG-29 is not a continuous nine-g machine like the F-16. I tried to do some things I normally do in an F-16. For example, I tried a high-AOA guns jink. I got the Fulcrum down to about 180 knots and pulled ninety degrees of bank and started pulling heavy g's. I then went to idle and added a little rudder to get the jet to roll with ailerons. The pilot took control away from me in the middle of these maneuvers because the airplane was about to snap. I use the F-16's quick roll rate like this all the time with no problem.
"I also tried to do a 250-knot loop," McCoy recalled. "I went to mil power and stabilized. As I went nose high, I asked for afterburner. I had to hamfist the airplane a little as I approached the top of the loop. I was still in afterburner at about 15,000 feet and the jet lost control. The nose started slicing left and right. I let go of the stick and the airplane righted itself and went down. It couldn't finish the loop. In the F-16, we can complete an entire loop at 250 knots."
Like Sparrow, McCoy climbed out of the MiG-29 cockpit feeling better about the F-16, especially its automation. "The biggest instrument in the MiG-29 cockpit is the clock," McCoy said. "It took me a while to understand this. But a large clock is needed to keep track of the time after launching a missile. When they launch a missile, they have to consider their shot range and the type of missile they are shooting and estimate how long it will take to impact before firing. When they take a five-mile Alamo shot, for example, they have to calculate mentally the time required for the missile to reach its target so their radar can illuminate it for the duration. They fire and watch until they know when they can turn away. That procedure is a real disadvantage if they're flying against someone who shot a missile at them at about the same time.
"F-16 pilots don't have to think about these things," McCoy continued. "We have great automation. When we launch a missile, the airplane performs all the calculations and displays a countdown on the head-up display for us. When we're within ten miles, we want our eyes out of the cockpit looking for flashes or smoke from an adversary. That's why our head-up display is focused to infinity. We can view information without refocusing our eyes to scan the horizon. Inside of ten miles, Fulcrum pilots are moving their hands around flipping about six switches, some they have to look at. I am moving one, maybe two switches, without taking my hands off the throttle and stick."
German Fulcrum pilots realize the limitations, and advantages, of their aircraft. "If you define an F-16 as a third-generation fighter, it is not fair to speak of the MiG-29 as a third-generation aircraft because of its avionics," said Lt. Col. Manfred Skeries, the deputy commander of the JG-73. "Aerodynamics, now, are something different." Skeries is the former commander of all East German fighter forces and the first German pilot to fly the MiG-29. His comments came after he received his first flight in the F-16.
"The MiG-29's avionics are a shortcoming," admitted Capt. Michael Raubbach, a Fulcrum pilot of the JG 73. "Its radar-warning and navigational equipment are not up to Western standards. The Russian idea of hands-on throttle and stick is not the same as it is in the West. It is true that we have to look in the cockpit a lot to flip switches. And the way information is provided and the accuracy with which it is provided-in the navigational equipment in particular-doesn't allow full employment in the Western concept.
"Our visibility is not as good as an F-16 or even an F-15," Raubbach continued. "We can't see directly behind us. We have to look out the side slightly to see behind us, which doesn't allow us to maintain a visual contact and an optimum lift vector at the same time. This shortcoming can be a real problem, especially when flying against an aircraft as small as the F-16. But as a German, I can't complain about the MiG's visibility. The aircraft offers the greatest visibility in our air force."
Raubbach is one of many Western-trained pilots who volunteered for the first five MiG-29 slots that became available after Germany made the JG 73 an operational wing. He is now an instructor pilot for the unit. "The helmet-mounted sight is a real advantage when it comes to engagements requiring a visual identification," Raubbach said. "It offers no advantage in a BVR engagement, however, unless you enter a short-range fight, which is not very likely against an AMRAAM-equipped opponent like we are facing here."
The Westernization of an Eastern aircraft has presented its own problems. The MiG-29's powerful Isotov RD-33 engines, designed as disposable commodities for a mass force, were intended to run about 400 hours before they had to be replaced. (By comparison, F-16 engines can run about 4,000 hours between overhauls.) The Germans have managed almost to double the RD-33's lifespan by detuning the engines by ten percent. Besides lowering thrust, the cost-saving fix has reduced range and dirtied the exhaust at lower altitudes. The move from JP-4 to NATO's standard fuel JP-8 has also hurt engine performance.
"The engines have been extremely reliable," commented Raubbach. "It goes from afterburner to military power, without problems, at various speeds and under varying g conditions. I can feel the difference detuning makes only at higher speeds. We have many spare engines. We had a shortage at one time, but we now have a big supply. Engines do not represent a shortcoming for us."
Though aerodynamically adept, the MiG-29's performance is constrained by avionics conforming to Soviet tactical doctrine. The aircraft was designed to rely heavily on a centralized system of ground controllers, which could take control of the aircraft's radar. The system could also land the plane if necessary. "Warsaw Pact pilots were not taught to evaluate a situation as it occurs in the air," Prunk explained. "Pilots were used to a system that made many decisions for them. The aircraft's guidance system had room for only six preprogrammed steerpoints, including three targets. The radio had twenty preselected channels at frequencies unknown to the pilot.
"The aircraft was not built for close-in dogfighting, though it is aerodynamically capable of it," Prunk continued. "The East Germans flew it as a point-defense interceptor, like a MiG-21. They were not allowed to max perform the airplane, to explore its capabilities or their own abilities. Sorties lasted about thirty minutes. The airplane was designed to scramble, jettison the tank, go supersonic, shoot its missiles, and go home." This relatively strict operational scenario presents its own limitations. Many of these involve the aircraft's centerline fuel tank. The MiG-29 cannot fly supersonic with the tank attached. Nor can pilots fire the aircraft's 30mm cannon (the tank blocks the shell discharge route) or use its speed brakes. The aircraft is limited to four g's when the tank has fuel remaining. The tank creates some drag and is also difficult to attach and remove. The MiG-29 can carry wing tanks that alleviate many of these shortcomings, but the Luftwaffe has no plans to purchase them from Russia.
Even given its drawbacks, the MiG-29 remains a formidable foe. "This deployment answered so many questions I had in my mind about the MiG-29," said McCoy, who flew in eight sorties against the Fulcrum and in one with it. "The experience confirmed what I knew about the MiG-29's ability to turn and to fight in the phonebooth. It is an awesome airplane in this regime. The awe, though, fades away after that first turn in. The biggest adrenaline rush was getting to that point. After that, I started evaluating it as a weapon. The German MiG-29 pilots represent a worst-case threat for us because their skills are so good."
"When Western pilots merge with a MiG for the first time, they tend to stare at it in awe," said West, who flew in three sorties against the Fulcrum. "Instead of flying their jets and fighting, they are enamored by this Soviet-built aircraft that they have spent their lives learning about. Pilots lose this sense of wonder after a first encounter. It is no longer a potential distraction. They are going to know what type of fight to fight and exactly where they may be in trouble. No one can learn these things by reading reports. Air-to-air fighting is a perishable skill. But the lessons we learned here won't be forgotten. These pilots will know at the merge exactly what they are up against. They will have more confidence. And they know they are flying an aircraft that is superior in maneuverability, power, and avionics.
"When our pilots first arrived here, they almost tripped over themselves because their eyes were glued to the ramp and those MiG-29s," West continued. "After a few days, though, those MiGs became just like any other aircraft. And that's the way it should be."
This is comical, you are bagging on the Mig-29 claiming that it has no sales thus it must be junk. Yet no one has bought any JF-17s or J-10s. The J-10 is also not that new, nor is that a big factor considering the F-35 is still in development but has many countries lined up to buy it. It should also be noted that Mig-29s have recently seen sales to Syria, India, and Russia, go back a number of years earlier and the sales list includes more customers. So how are the JF-17 and J-10 sales working out again?
Sure mig-29s have sale for "sanctioned" countries,poor countries like Syria,Myanmar and N.Korea (yeah they operate a few dnt they) ... and the older operater .. Warsaw countries... while others like Algeria,Malaysia etc want to replace them...
P.S: Even germans replaced their jets with after 20 years of service to Poland for 1 euro... while countries are still buying old F-16s and getting them MLUd..
As for J-10 it was inducted in 2006+ ... and not for sale at tht time... another hurdle is/was the Russian powerplant... another thing.. PAF has orderered quiet a few...
Also... its basic variant is still more expensive than a mig-29 ... starting from 45+ million $ a pop... heck they are now testing the C version..
As for JF-17 again a new jet... several countries showing interest... and if Alan Warnes and other sources are to be believed a deal with SL for 6 has already been signed .. while (according to "The Diplomat" .. )Indonesians have signed some agreement aswell....
First you made the claim that the RD-33 is fuel thirsty, when I proved you wrong you change the subject. How many times have you done so already? Too many to remember by now. The RD-33 has also seen many variants and improvements. The WS-10 which is so highly praised and still under development is said to have a life cycle of 2,200 hours while operational RD-33s are lasting 4,000 hours.
Lmao.. read my post again dude. yes mig-29 with rd-33 is a fuel guzzling boy..
Also WS-13 (not WS-10 and variant) is still under development and im not much familiar with its capabilities.. but here it goes:
China has an indigenous WS-13 engine to replace the RD-33 for the JF-17. Global Security states that the Chinese WS-13 engine has "a major repair interval of roughly 810 hrs, service life span 2200 hrs, both far exceed the RD-33 engine."
"The WS13 engine is 4.14 meters long, 1.02 meters in diameter, weighing 1,135 kg. The engine will have a major repair interval of roughly 810 hrs, service life span 2200 hrs, both far exceed the RD-33 engine. Most western jets have easily double the amount of time interval between overhauls and double the engine life when compared to Chinese and/or Russian engines. The difference lies in material sciences. The alloys and materials used can double the life of the engine thus greatly reducing service costs.
The engine uses a three-string wide solid titanium axial core. The former fans are computer-controlled variable steering guide vanes. The 8-stage axial pressure compressor (for the former three adjustable guide vane) used hollow-cooled single-stage low-pressure turbine rotor blade. The single crystal turbine blades for the high-pressure turbine blade and a guide, annular combustor. a tip clearance control air heat exchanger and integrated digital control system for the whole."
WS13 / RD-33 / RD-93 engine
Want to talk abt WS-10 series now?
Moron post. The Mig-29 has one of the highest thrust to weight ratios of any aircraft to ever fly. I'm also not sure how a jet engine can "suck the power outta [a] mig-29" Care to elaborate, never mind don't waste my time, it's obvious you don't know what you are talking about. Its also about time you live in the present, you keep quoting or making reference to old Mig-29 variants, if you did some research you would know that fuel capacity has been increased on Mig-29s.
I might as well start claiming that F-16s have no BVR capability because the earlier variants did not, then again I would never stoop to the levels of using outdated information to further my agenda if I was losing an argument like you are. Notice the pattern, you are ignoring the capabilities of modern Mig-29s and instead bring up ancient Mig-29s.
Nonsense debunked ... try again..
This is rich, the Pakistanis sure did not have a problem using Russian Mig-21s to shoot down Israelis when the Arabs were taking heavy losses using the same aircraft. It just shows how better training makes all the difference. I also fail to see how Mig-29s using older Missiles, having no AWACs, no IFF, inferior pilots, malfunctioning avionics, ect is a nonsense excuse.
So now your hiding behind pilot training and tactics?
Yes you did, And in the process you proved my point that you were wrong because those numbers were far from the claim of 38 that you made.
Thanks...
Right, because you say so? Countries that have had problems with Mig-29 were because of age and the cost of upgrading those aircraft and not because they "hate it". The Polish aquired more Mig-29s from the Germans and upgraded them, they plan to keep those Mig-29s operational for a very long time, why because they have the money.
Lmao.. Pole got them for a symbolic price of 1 euro.. in 2003 beat tht price..and upgraded them for 30+ million $
Also Poles are operating F-16s (older blocks)...
Although the Romanians jet bought old F-16 block-15 jets recently...
No I did not pay for those F-16s US tax dollars did.
Cool story bruh:
http://www.google.com.pk/url?sa=t&r...=1LKvb3Ph-Ti7WFD1QH9mxw&bvm=bv.58187178,d.bGE