J-20 5th Gen Fighter Thread IV (Closed to posting)

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Deino

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At last I truly see!

Now, cue in the speculations about the engines. :p

Hmmm ... actually I don't think it will be anything different than the AL-31FN ... however I would like to know if its also the Series III version. :confused:

Deino
 

wtlh

Junior Member
But why are we seeing the canted tail only and not the rest of the plane?

The building with blue roof is actually a hanger, and the front of it (facing us) is open, with what appears to be a canted tail of a J20 sticking out.

It took me a while to realise this. Initially I thought the building has a solid wall with windows facing us, but a little more observation made me realise that what we are seeing is actually inside the hanger, and the windows looked bright because of the day light coming in from the other side; and a J20 is clearly parked inside.
 
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latenlazy

Brigadier
The building with blue roof is actually a hanger, and the front of it (facing us) is open, with what appears to be a canted tail of a J20 sticking out.

It took me a while to realise this. Initially I thought the building has a solid wall with windows facing us, but a little more observation made me realise that what we are seeing is actually inside the hanger, and the windows looked bright because of the day light coming in from the other side; and a J20 is clearly parked inside.

Even when I saw the tail I couldn't quite make sense of the image until you gave that explanation. Thanks.
 

thunderchief

Senior Member
Article in Aviation Week, lengthy and detailed analysis of J-20

J-20 Stealth Fighter Design Balances Speed And Agility

Unique J-20 could fit anti-access role
Nov 10, 2014 Bill Sweetman | Aviation Week & Space Technology

Chengdu’s J-20 stealth fighter represents the pinnacle of China’s aerospace engineering, but its existence and development have posed mysteries since the unexpected appearance of the first prototype at the end of 2010, followed in May 2012 by the debut of a second, similar aircraft. The past few months, however, have seen the first flights of a pair of significantly different J-20s, identified by the serial Nos. 2011 and 2012.

The most substantial design change in the new aircraft appears to be that the fuselage aft of the main landing gear is a bit more slender, with a deeper tunnel in the undersurface between the engines. The tailbooms that extend aft of the all-moving vertical tails are longer, and the lower fixed stabilizers are moved aft. The trailing-edge tips of the vertical tails and canards are cropped, and the leading-edge root extensions are straight rather than curved.
Airshow China

See news and analysis from Airshow China

The top line of the outer wall of the diverterless supersonic inlet has been drooped, and the landing gear doors changed: The main doors now close after the gear has extended and the nose landing gear door has been reshaped. The F-22-style one-piece frameless canopy on the early aircraft has given way to a separate windshield and canopy, the latter with detonation cord to shatter the canopy for ejection. What appears to be a housing for an infrared search and track system has been added below the nose, and a missile-warning sensor fairing installed below the aft fuselage.

The new variant aircraft appeared slightly more than three years after the first flight of No. 2001, so some of the changes may reflect lessons from flight testing. Other changes represent a move toward a production or pre-production design. So far, there have been few indications as to when the J-20 will enter service: The Pentagon, in its latest annual report to Congress, says it is unlikely to be operational before 2018.

However, the appearance of the new aircraft tends to confirm that the design has proved sound so far; all four prototypes are now reported to be at Yanliang air base in Xian, the Chinese air force’s main test site. The question now is what role the J-20—which is not only the first Chinese stealth fighter but the largest tactical aircraft built in China—will perform in the future force.

Close examination of the J-20 shows it has no direct analogue in the West or in Russia. The dimensions can be estimated accurately from open-source satellite images, but its characteristics are sometimes mis-assessed through a focus on overall size. Details of avionics and materials remain uncertain.................................

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