Akasa
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2008
- Messages
- 7,227
- Reaction score
- 9
- Country
- Location
China went to the West after relationship with Soviet Union went sour in the 1960's. China was no longer able to get the latest Russian toys or technical assistance from Soviet experts. It was severely lagging behind by the late 1970's. The loss of access to newer Soviet weapon technology meant China only had the West to go. Never in any point in PRC's history did China have both access to both Western and Soviet assistance. It was always one or the other. To claim that China would have done something if they had the choice is pure imagination.
The British offered their Hawk and Harrier to the Chinese, who revealed the contenders seriously. However, due to Tiananmen, it was cancelled. The time came after the Sino Soviet Split, when the West opened to China.
Great, send me these classified data so I can do a comparison.
No need, the company released specs are enough.
YJ-12:
Speed - Mach 2.5
Range - 400 km
Uses newly designed warhead with equivalent firepower of 500 kg of TNT
DH-10:
Range - 4000 km
Speed - subsonic
Can use multiple types of warheads
CJ-10:
Range - 2200 km
Speed - Mach 2.25
Can be air launched
C-803:
Range - 255 km
Speed - Mach 1.6
Uses pop up approach
98% single shot kill probability
Has dodging ability
Has strong anti jamming capability
C-805 variant has a range of 400 km
Type 59/62/69/79/80/88 still make up the bulk of Chinese tank force, modern or not.
And that comparison does not mean much. China has the world's 2nd largest tank force. If we choose to retire all the old ones, then the Type 96G and Type 99 series make up 100% of the force, and that will still remain a formidable 2800 tank force.
In this case it's not the percentage that matters; it's the numbers.
That's assuming Russians were stagnant when it comes to upgrading their own Tu-16 fleet. Unfortunately, they are now completely retired from service and replaced with much more capable Su-34/Tu-160. China has yet to develop something as capable.
That's not what I'm trying to say. I'm saying that the modern H-6 variants in service barely shares the same technologies as the Tu-16. Your saying that the modern H-6s rely on Russian technology is partially incorrect.
And yet you neglect the fact that that the "modern" equipments are only issued to front line units while the bulk are still using outdated toys.
If a 300 million man force has only 20 million "modern" soldiers, then it is still a formidable force, regardless of the percentage the "modern soldiers" comprise. In this case it's the pure numbers that matter, not the percentage.
No it does not, but apparently they were impressed with T-80 enough to implement some of its design into Type 99. Also, the original design goal of Type 96 (85IIAP) was to counter Soviet T-72, a design which was more than 15 years into service at the time.
"Implement" is a different word than "copy" or "developed from". As far as design and configuration is concerned, the Type 99 is mostly Chinese developed.
The design goal change all the time. The J-10A was originally designed to counter the MiG-29. It is no longer the goal. The Type 96G is referred to as the Type 85IIIM, not Type 85IIAP.
Not enough to change the fact that most equipments in PLA are still based on obsolete Soviet design.
Which brings me to my previous points. The bulk of the equipment are from the 1970s, when the PLA relied all on Soviet technology. Almost all modern PLA equipment are not.
Everything will eventually be replaced. However, it does not take away the fact that Romeo, Ming and Kilos are of Russian origin. It also does not take away the fact that most of the submarine force is made up of these boats.
And China has the world's 3rd largest submarine force. A small portion is big enough for China's defense. China does not need a hegemonic military force like that of the US.
Percentages can be misleading. A 100 submarine force with 90% modern equipment is still not as capable as a 3000 submarine force with 5% modern equipment.
Certainly times have changed, but it only changed for a short while.
Did I say otherwise?
Is Y-20 in service? WS-10 has not yet been put into any operational platform except J-11B. WS-15 is several years from ready. PL-12C/D and PL-21 are both in development. If anything, this comment illustrate that China is still dependent on Russians.
Hence the term "late development".
China depended on Russia to boost its industries. But do you see Russia involving with PL-12, WS-10G, WS-15, J-20, or J-11B? No. China still imports engines and many subsystems from Russia, but that is independent of China's ability to produce her own.