name and their occupation? when you believe them creditable and they are, but otherwise? 8-year-old kid philosophy
Besides quoting engineers that worked on aircraft such as the F-117 i have quoted various publications including scientific journals, and what have you quoted? Nothing, What about your fellow fanboys? The most credible sources you guys use is some blogs, pathetic.
Back to topic here is the references of one source i used:
Thinking in the US Air Force, 1907-1960, Vol. I (Maxwell AFB, AL:
Air University Press, 1989) p. 485.
33. Walton S. Moody, Building a Strategic Air Force (Washington,
DC: USGPO, 1996) p. 104-105.
34. Moody, p. 106.
35. Moody, p. 422.
36. Gen. Thomas D. White, quoted in Futrell, p. 514.
37. Fletcher Knebel, The Coming Death of the Flying Air
Force, Look magazine, Oct. 1, 1957.
38. Quoted in Ben Rich and Leo Janos, Skunk Works: A
Personal Memoir of My Years at Lockheed (Boston: Little
Brown, 1994) p. 147.
39. Quoted in Rich and Janos, p. 247.
40. Futrell, Ideas, Concepts and Doctrine: Basic Thinking in the
US Air Force, 1961-1984, Vol. II, p. 389.
41. Gen. William W. Momyer, USAF (Ret.), Airpower in Three
Wars (Washington, DC: Department of the Air Force, 1978)
p. 125-126.
42. Lt. Col. James R. Brungress, USAF, Setting the Context:
Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses and Joint Warfighting
in an Uncertain World (Maxwell AFB, AL: Air University Press,
1994) p. 11.
43. Maj. A. J. C. Lavalle, USAF, gen. ed., The Tale of Two Bridges
and the Battle for the Skies Over North Vietnam, USAF
Southeast Asia Monograph Series, Vol. 1, Monographs 1 and
2 (Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History, 1976) p. 152.
44. Brig. Gen. James R. McCarthy, Lt. Col. George B. Allison and,
Col. Robert E. Rayfield, gen.ed., Linebacker II: A View From
the Rock, USAF SEA Monograph Series Vol. VI, Monograph 8
(Washington, DC: Office of Air Force History, 1985) p. 173.
45. Werrell, p. 52-53.
46. Capt. Robert E. Wolff, USAF, Linebacker II: A Pilots
Perspective, Air Force Magazine, September 1979, p. 89.
47. Maj. Calvin R. Johnson, Project CHECO Report: Linebacker
Operations, September - December 1972 (Hickam AFB, HI:
Hq. Pacific Air Forces Office of History, 1978) Appendix Five, p.
95; Wolff, p. 89-91.
48. Col. John A. Warden III, USAF, The Air Campaign: Planning for
Combat (Washington, DC: Pergamon-Brasseys International
Defense Publishers, 1989) p. 60.
49. Brungress, p. 28.
50. Quoted in Maj. William A. Hewitt, Planting the Seeds of
SEAD: The Wild Weasel in Vietnam (Maxwell AFB, AL: Air
University, 1992) p. 34.
51. Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Ralston, Keynote Address to HAVE
Forum, 1994, US Air Force Academy.
52. William Green, The Warplanes of the Third Reich (New
York: Galahad Books, 1986) p. 247-251. The British also had a
wooden (but not composite and charcoal-coated) bomber,
the Mosquito, though its stealth characteristics were almost
nil because the radar waves that passed through the wood
outer structure would reflect off internal structures, such as
the skeleton, wing spars, bomb racks, the cockpit, and the
engines. The Mosquito probably had a lower RCS than a
metallic Lancaster or Halifax, though this amount was not
militarily significant. The Mosquitos survivability was derived
from its performance rather than its RCS reduction. Doug
Richardson, Stealth (New York: Orion Books, 1989) p. 42.
53. Green, p. 249.
54. Green, p. 251.
55. Cited in Richardson, p. 96.
56. Rich, p. 24, 215.
57. David C. Jenn, Radar and Laser Cross-Section Engineering
(Washington, DC: AIAA, 1995) p. 6.
58. Conduct of the Persian Gulf War: Final Report to Congress
(Washington, DC: Department of Defense, April 1992) p. 154.
59. Gulf War Air Power Survey, Volume II: Operations and
Effectiveness (Washington, DC: Department of the Air Force,
USGPO, 1993) p. 79. Hereafter referred to as GWAPS.
60. Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor, The Generals
War: The Inside Story of the Conflict in the Gulf (Boston: Little,
Brown, c1995) p. 115.
61. GWAPS Vol. II, p. 123-124.
62. Thomas A. Keaney and Elliot A. Cohen, Gulf War Air Power
Survey Summary Report (Washington, DC: Department of
the Air Force, 1993) p. 224.
63. Christopher J. Bowie, Untying the Bloody Scarf (Arlington,
VA: IRIS Independent Research, 1998) p. 15.
64. John Shaeffer, Understanding Stealth (Marietta, GA:
Marietta Scientific, Inc., undated paper) p. 15.
arent you one of the fanboys club? keep making up those noncensical claims that T-50 is superior yet mostly a poor design did by lack of fund Russian scientists```` and it sounds you are the only one who has all the 'secretitive' Sukhoi data?--again 8-year-old ranting```most of your claims are factitious``
Wrong, fanboy. I never made any claims about the pak-fa, the closest thing to a claim i made was about the wing geometry based off of know design laws and physics. Other than that i provided sources about how effective radar blockers can be after a couple of your fellow fanboys dismissed the technology, than again it had nothing to do specifically with the pak-fa. Further, it is you and chumps like yourself that constatnly emmbaress yourselves by guessing rcs, assuming the J-20 is stealthy because it had 'DSI' and a 'one peice canopy' and using terms such as 'super advanced'.
so do many many other members```yet your claim is still questionable`
this is a joke right? Are these the same member that claim the 'metal' in a canopy increases RCS or that canards do not increas RCS because they 'are like papers from the front'. Show me what you know, disprove my finding or else keep quiet and stay out of conversations you have no bussiness being in.
You can google all you want but as far as we are concerned you don't work for Sukhoi so everything you've presented is pure speculation.
Wrong, everything i presented is based off of know laws of physics, so unless J-20 engineers somehow magically managed to defy the laws of physics i think it is safe to say that my finding are not speculation. Of course maybe individuals such as Petr Ufimtsev, the man than wrote the book on stealth are idiots, maybe the designers of the F-117 are liars, maybe all of publishers i have quoted have formed a big conspiracy.
We'll see how a quasi bankrupt firm like Sukhoi can even rival with a state-owned CAC in terms of R&D.
Are you kidding me? What the hell is CAC
and Sukhoi has shares by both private companies as well as the 'state'. Furhter, how am i supoosed to take your comment seriously, when Chinese companies shamelessly copy the Sukhoi airframe? What is the matter, they can't come up with something on their own? I'm sure Sukhoi is trembling in their boots, afterall how can they compete with someone that copies them. At the end of the day Sukhoi sell aircraft all over the world, the SU-30 is wildly popular and for good reason. Superjest 100 has 189 orders and counting, India and Russia plan to purchase 500 pak-fa's, this is not counting other potential customers, the SU-35 and SU-34 have orders and many countries continue to purchase the SU-30. Yes how can Sukhoi compete with the world renowned (sarcasm) CAC?
I doubt he will accept this reality which proves over and over again that Sukhoi is losing its edge to CAC or even SAC...
Losing it edge, based on what? Your deluted perception?
the only area that China aviation suffers are the turbofan engines, but it is not going to be perminant```
Yet Russian components other than turbofan engines are used in Chinese aircraft......
now what left to Sukhoi was the Echo of the mighty Soviet, and persoanlly I believe it has been overrated
A company that has produced thousands of aircraft and countless varieties is overrated? The SU-27 alone broke
41 world records, how many world records have Chinese aircraft broke? Why did China purchase SU-27's than SU-30's, and than shamlessly copied the SU-27 airframe in the J-11 and J-15? Is that overrated? So which part of Sukhoi is overrated?