Chinese UAV/UCAV development

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FarkTypeSoldier

Junior Member
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Its a strange design. Why are the main wings fixed to the tailfins?

To improve aerodynamics?

But its a nice bird to watch.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
^^ Could be..

Start this video at 49 seconds..

[video=youtube;lX0MeA-Z4IU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=lX0MeA-Z4IU[/video]
 

Blitzo

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More smaller but HALE.

Xianglong is 14.33m long, global hawk is 14.5m-ish.

Obviously global hawk has a greater wingspan, but Xianglong uses a box wing configuration which brings its own aerodynamic benefits.

Xianglong is quoted to have a range of 7000km, but I think that is understated given its similar size to RQ-4A/B, and is likely a constraint of limited chinese satellite coverage of the globe rather than a limitation of the airframe itself.
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Just throwing this out there being a non-expert. If there were AEW platform UAVs, doesn't triangulation help in detecting stealth? You can have a net of AEW HALE UAVs constantly in the air quickly covering areas that fixed stations could not. Look at how Japanese radar stations couldn't detect that Y-12.
 
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leibowitz

Junior Member
Just throwing this out there being a non-expert. If there were AEW platform UAVs, doesn't triangulation help in detecting stealth? You can have a net of AEW HALE UAVs constantly in the air quickly covering areas that fixed stations could not. Look at how Japanese radar stations couldn't detect that Y-12.

That would be a nice capability for the PLAAF/PLAN to have-- a constant AWACS net above whatever operating area they chose, generated by dozens of HALE UAVs.
 

latenlazy

Brigadier
Just throwing this out there being a non-expert. If there were AEW platform UAVs, doesn't triangulation help in detecting stealth? You can have a net of AEW HALE UAVs constantly in the air quickly covering areas that fixed stations could not. Look at how Japanese radar stations couldn't detect that Y-12.
Yes, but triangulation actually requires that you know where to look. Objects outside the overlapped detection space will go unnoticed. Furthermore, that strategy would depend on a good data link and the right recognition algorithms. It works in theory, but it can get complicated in practice.
 
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