China's transport, tanker & heavy lift aircraft

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Here is our good colonel article on the new Y 20 sighting in Yanliang as usual He err by saying China does not have the drogue and chute technology Sometime he use his prejudice instead of dong research on the subject as a fact. An as usual fear mongering Yes theoritically it can support any Tibet contingencies. But rail transport is more efficient
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


so anyone keep tally on how many Y 20 is now with the recent sighting 10 maybe

The ‘Chubby Girl’ giving China an edge over India
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
24 March, 2018

Y20-2.001.jpeg

China’s new strategic transporter, the Y-20, being built in significant numbers, satellite imagery shows.

China’s indigenously developed military transport aircraft, the Y-20, is being built in significant numbers, with latest satellite imagery showing six planes at various stages of completion at the production hub of Yanliang.

The home-grown transporter is codenamed ‘Kunpeng’ after the mythical bird beast believed to fly for tens of thousands of kilometres in a single flight and dubbed “chubby girl”. Designed and manufactured by government entity Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), the lifter is aerodynamically shaped and sized akin to the Russian transport aircraft IL-76, which is also operated in large numbers by India.

A key difference is the tail section, where the Y 20 resembles the C-17 Globemaster of the US Air Force, another transporter in service with the Indian Air Force.

Given its deep and wide fuselage, the aircraft is believed to be designed for a load of 200 metric tonnes, and transporting troops and cargo. There are reports that the Y-20 can be converted to carry electronic warfare and refuelling equipment, enhancing China’s national strength.

The aircraft’s designed performance, especially in adverse weather conditions, makes it the ideal transporter for operations during natural calamities and humanitarian assistance operations.

First Flight
Y20-1.001.jpeg

Vinayak Bhat/ThePrint
The Y-20 Kunpeng, which is supposed to improve China’s strategic power projection capability, took off on its first flight on New Year’s Day in January 2013. The flight at Xi’an Yanliang airport has been caught on satellite imagery.

Operationalisation
The first two aircraft were delivered to the 12th air regiment of the 4th transport division at Qionglai in June 2016. The aircraft was officially handed over to the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) in the first week of July 2016 at a larger ceremony in Yanliang.

Y20-2.001.jpeg

Vinayak Bhat/ThePrint
Satellite imagery of Qionglai from December 2017 indicates at least three more aircraft have joined the regiment. Latest imagery of Yanliang, from February 2018, shows six aircraft at various stages of completion. The imagery suggests at least four of the aircraft are ready for delivery to the Qionglai airbase.

Y20-4.001.jpeg

Vinayak Bhat/ThePrint
Strategic Airlift Exercises
Qionglai came to pre-eminence as an important strategic transport airbase when the PLAAF conducted its first-ever large-scale exercise for handling simultaneous operations of multiple aircraft from a dual runway airport in November 2012.

Y20-3.001.jpeg

Vinayak Bhat/ThePrint
The airbase, home to the fourth transport division of the PLAAF, is located 650km from the Indian border. A recent exercise was conducted over Tibet in the first week of June 2017 to test combat airlift capability in the area. This took place barely 10 days before the Doklam faceoff surfaced.

The Future
Reports on the Chinese internet suggest that China is planning to convert some of these aircraft into mid-air refuellers to augment its H-6U and IL-78 fleet. However, China has yet to master the drogue technology that is needed for efficient mid-air fuelling operations.

Some trial versions were observed at a few aeronautical exhibitions but they have not been seen in use. A sudden jump in strategic transports will greatly enhance China’s strategic airlift capability. It will act as a force multiplier in all of the PLAAF’s future operations. The strategic location of these aircraft at Qionglai gives China exceptional aerial capabilities against India.
 

Lethe

Captain
200-ton payload capacity, nice. Take that, An-225! :cool:

Short-term, India's C-17s provide more than a match for China's Y-20 lift capabilities, but in the longer term China will be able to procure many more such aircraft than India can afford, or at least conclude contracts for...
 

Deino

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
Here is our good colonel article on the new Y 20 sighting in Yanliang as usual He err by saying China does not have the drogue and chute technology Sometime he use his prejudice instead of dong research on the subject as a fact. An as usual fear mongering Yes theoritically it can support any Tibet contingencies. But rail transport is more efficient
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


so anyone keep tally on how many Y 20 is now with the recent sighting 10 maybe
.


Once again this BS :mad: and I'm slowly loosing my patience with him. I answered him already twice to this by a simple comparison of where these Y-20As are based and where the IAF's closest Il-76/-78 unit based????

IAF - PLAAF 1.jpg IAF - PLAAF 2.jpg
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
200-ton payload capacity, nice. Take that, An-225! :cool:

Short-term, India's C-17s provide more than a match for China's Y-20 lift capabilities, but in the longer term China will be able to procure many more such aircraft than India
This part I agree with.

can afford,
erroneous. This is not the issue. However this next part can be saved
or at least conclude contracts for..
the main reason why the Indians don't buy More C17 is not the price or issues with Indian defence contacts. It's that the Boeing line is closed. There are no more C17 in the pipeline. Unless they could convince another user of C17s to sell them a few units the Indian Air Force cannot add new units for the forseafores future. Same for any other nation.
It's really rare for a large transport like C17 to be in production. Smaller transports are more common and tend to have longer production runs.
Because of this when one is available for export it tends to get snatched up fast. I have said before that if China placed the Y20 in the export market it would be bought up like hot cakes. Perhaps not by the US or Russia, but middle Eastern states, African nations, smaller European countries South American nations, a few Neighbors in Asia Would be bidding for a few here and there.
 

Deino

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
So far this is the highest number spotted ... but surely more are already finished.
 
Top