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helo sister me fine ji hows you good to see you
I would trust proven systems. And you are quite mistaken with the Americans, they actually overestimate the system and then try to beat it. Till the 80's, Americans pilots and commanders thought that the Mig-23 was an aircraft that would kill them instantly once it got its wings swept forward. So they trained and worked with it till they found that even an average American pilot would score repeatedly over them.
It is folly for the Russians to make statements such as "intellectual" and "leap" when it comes to American Air power.
xport variants of Soviet military equipment were versions of Soviet military equipment (armored vehicles, airplanes, missiles) of significantly inferior capability to the original designs and intended only for export. Monkey model was the unofficial designation given by the Soviet Military to such variants. The monkey model was exported with the same or a similar designation as the original Soviet design but in fact it lacked many of the advanced or expensive features of the original.
Monkey-model weaponry was used mainly by non-communist Soviet allies, such as Egypt, Iraq and Syria. Eastern Bloc states generally used fully capable versions of Soviet weaponry, although poorer states often used earlier generations of weapons.
The term monkey model was popularized in the West by Viktor Suvorov, in Inside the Soviet Army. Suvorov states that the simplified monkey model was designed for massive production in wartime, to replace front-line stocks if a war should last for several weeks. In peacetime, Soviet industry gained experience building both standard and export-model variants, the latter being for sale "to the 'brothers' and 'friends' of the USSR as the very latest equipment available." He also cites the benefit of disinformation when an exported monkey model fell into the hands of Western intelligence, who "naturally gained a completely false impression of the true combat capabilities of the BMP-1 and of Soviet tanks" (Suvorov 1982:215).
Export variants of Soviet military equipment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Monkey-model aircraft were downgraded in a manner similar to that of tanks. The MiG-23 MS 'Flogger-E', for example, was an export variant the original MiG 23 developed because the MiG 23 was considered too advanced to be exported to Third World countries. The 'Flogger-E' lacked the most advanced features of the original. Infra-red search and track and beyond visual range missile capabilities were removed and its avionics suite was very basic. This variant was widely sold during the 1970s to Soviet allies in the Middle East.
Right, supposedly because they were able to see more. The Russians claim that their aircraft is better.
The F-22 may see "only" 300km(unknown if that is the limit) but the 400km range is practically useless when the F-22 is going to be sitting 25km away from the Su-35 and the Flanker would be looking at a blank scope before he get hit by a missile and blown to smithereens. @gambit
Monkey model..
Not always monkey models. The training mentioned assumed that the Mig would win. That it was a superior airplane in all respects. That is the mentality that the USAF takes into a fight and trains to fight with. When that training is put to the test, the results are quite plain to see. Moreover, thanks to the dissolution of the USSR; the USAF is no longer training against Monkey models(unless off course you imply that the MKI and MKM are monkey models). They train with whatever the Russians throw into the field and still dominate.
Monkey-model aircraft were downgraded in a manner similar to that of tanks. The MiG-23 MS 'Flogger-E', for example, was an export variant the original MiG 23 developed because the MiG 23 was considered too advanced to be exported to Third World countries. The 'Flogger-E' lacked the most advanced features of the original. Infra-red search and track and beyond visual range missile capabilities were removed and its avionics suite was very basic. This variant was widely sold during the 1970s to Soviet allies in the Middle East.
Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/air-wa...kes-f-22-terms-intellect-3.html#ixzz2h9XJyf7q
They train with whatever the Russians throw into the field and still dominate.
Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/air-wa...kes-f-22-terms-intellect-3.html#ixzz2h9XxFV63
do you really beleave in that i guess russians are way too smart even SU 35S has ASEA Radar that too multi band + OLS and Passive sensors like spectra whch combined are very much capable of detecting &tracking the F22 before it con fire its missiles on SU 35 dont worry americans have a habit of degrading and making fun of there powerfull enemies/opponents which they cant control
On the mig. I don't know whether Su-30 MKI is superior or inferior to russian Su-27. But Russians focus more on the ADM network rather than fighters these days. USSR is no more and USA has the largest defence budget so its obvious that US equipment will be better in many aspects.
Second,
There was indo-us exercise of indian su-30 mki and f-15 some years back. I think Su-30 dominated then.But then against F-22 I doubt Su-30 will dominate .
Mulla Nitish Khan is also in list, For keeping him name out of fodder scam, he traded with devil... All Hail Slaves..
We are already going for Super MKI
The Su-35S has already overtaken the only fifth generation fighter to enter service to date the American F-22 Raptor. Thus, the ‘Irbis’ radar control system fitted to the Su-35S is able to detect an airborne target at a record distance of up to 400 km and of tracking up to 30 targets and engaging 8 simultaneously[/B]. The radar system on the F-22 is weaker: the maximum detection range is only 300 km.
There was indo-us exercise of indian su-30 mki and f-15 some years back. I think Su-30 dominated then.But then against F-22 I doubt Su-30 will dominate .
Sorry, but you are dreaming.do you really beleave in that i guess russians are way too smart even SU 35S has ASEA Radar that too multi band + OLS and Passive sensors like spectra whch combined are very much capable of detecting &tracking the F22 before it con fire its missiles on SU 35 dont worry americans have a habit of degrading and making fun of there powerfull enemies/opponents which they cant control
Sorry, but you are dreaming.
To start off...I explained how the SPECTRA and its derivatives can be defeated, especially by a first world EW system like ours, and SPECTRA is not for detection but an attempt to deceive a seeking radar, in essence, it is countermeasure. To detect its target, the F-22 with its LPI AESA system have nothing to fear from SPECTRA.
Having an AESA alone does not guarantee a capable system. In fact, having an AESA but not commensurate software to exploit its capability is overkill and a waste of money. The more capable an adversary's countermeasures, the greater the need for LPI, and right now, we are the best in both producing LPI signals to bypass countermeasures and discrimination of LPI signals from background as part of counermeasures. I do not expect you or anyone, least of all our Russians friends here, to believe that.
Against the F-22, any adversary is likely to face a no-win scenario:
- If he blast the atmosphere with power, especially in the long wavelengths, to try to detect the F-22, he advertises himself and the F-22 do not need to go active to kill him. The F-22's passive sensor system can calculate the most likely source direction of those transmissions and pass that information to an AMRAAM. The AMRAAM itself also does not need to go active. It can stay in beamrider mode until the last couple seconds to the target.
- If he go silent in trying to pass through a line of F-22s, the likelihood of him being scanned by an LPI transmission is high and he will be revealed anyway.
The Su-35 is ALREADY dead.