J-20 5th Gen Fighter Thread VIII

siegecrossbow

Field Marshall
Staff member
Super Moderator
It's a tradeoff; 9th tends to be among the first to receive airframes of a new "type" of aircraft, but due to being the first it also means they tend to receive the less capable batches of the airframes as they inevitably are of earlier batches.
If the pattern holds then Anshan will receive the first batch of WS-15 J-20A. There will be a market for hand-me-down J-20 forming within PLAAF pretty soon.
 

Deino

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
If the pattern holds then Anshan will receive the first batch of WS-15 J-20A. There will be a market for hand-me-down J-20 forming within PLAAF pretty soon.


That will be indeed the question since we already have almost three units - namely the 9th, the 5th and 41st ABs - as former vanilla J-20 units, which replaced the old ones with the improved J-20A. As such there should be soon rumour regarding 2 - 3 additional units converting to regular J-20! Any hints already?
 

lcloo

Major
The dark factory setting is mainly for the component manufacturing and the "skeleton" of the aircraft. Final assembly still need human hands.

As per the news article:
"China has more than doubled the production efficiency of stealth fighter components in a “dark factory”, where autonomous vehicles and AI-driven machinery operate nearly 24 hours a day.

The process once required employees to monitor its round-the-clock operations, but the plant can now produce the “skeleton” of an aircraft in near darkness, according to the official Science and Technology Daily."

"The plant is also equipped with intelligent scanning systems and robots that can inspect products and quickly generate reports."


"It has also reduced the hours of human labour needed to operate the plant by more than 80 per cent – although workers are still needed for the final assembly of the planes."
 

latenlazy

Brigadier
The dark factory setting is mainly for the component manufacturing and the "skeleton" of the aircraft. Final assembly still need human hands.

As per the news article:
"China has more than doubled the production efficiency of stealth fighter components in a “dark factory”, where autonomous vehicles and AI-driven machinery operate nearly 24 hours a day.

The process once required employees to monitor its round-the-clock operations, but the plant can now produce the “skeleton” of an aircraft in near darkness, according to the official Science and Technology Daily."

"The plant is also equipped with intelligent scanning systems and robots that can inspect products and quickly generate reports."


"It has also reduced the hours of human labour needed to operate the plant by more than 80 per cent – although workers are still needed for the final assembly of the planes."
Wonder if this implies that the frame and bulkheads are actually all 3D printed now.
 
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