New Stealth Fighters, Aircraft Carriers
And UCAVs: Dissecting The Real State Of China’s Naval Aviation
We interviewed Chinese military aviation expert Andreas Rupprecht to learn more
about the progress of the PLAN (People’s Liberation Army Navy) Naval Aviation.
Last week we reported about the the existence of two new stealth
fighters in China. The first one is a two-seater variant of the J-20 (J-20B or
J-20S) that carried out a taxi test in yellow primer at Chengdu Aerospace
Corporation plant on Oct. 27, 2021. Then, two days later, images started
circulating online of a “navalized” stealth fighter (possibly
designated J-35), a carrier capable variant of the land based FC-31, in green
primer, during what might have been the type’s first flight.
Therefore, in a matter of a few days, China has shown the world that along with being the first ever to operate a two-seater stealth fighter, it will also be the first nation outside of the U.S. to develop a fully domestic carrier capable stealth fighter (with some pretty significant things in
common with the In order to learn more about the progress of the most interesting Chinese programs and assess the status of the emerging PLAN Naval Aviation we asked expert analyst Andreas Rupprecht who edits the Modern Chinese Warplanes page on Facebook, has published a series of authoritative reference guides about Chinese military aircraft (and many others), and, above all, is considered an authority when it deals with Chinese military aviation.
Here are his responses to our questions.
Q. Hi Andreas, first of all thank you for your time. Then, I would ask you what we know about this aircraft, what does the existence of 4 stealth jets in China (J-20A, B, FC-31 and J-35) mean in terms of progress in this field?
First, we know it is under development since several years and has
its roots in the two SAC stealth technology demonstrators FC-31 no. 01 and 02 (aka 31001 & 31003).
As such I expect a shorter overall time of flight testing even if the most
interesting part of that story will be the cat-test and carrier qualifications
up to operational readiness. Consequently, I think it is safe to assume that
stealth technology is no longer a stranger in China – just look in parallel to
the J-20B twin-seater and the just recently unveiled “strange thing” at CAC, which eventually
could be a configuration related to the 6th generation fighter – , the only
question is how stealthy are these new fighters, how capable and integrated is
their sensor system and to what extent they are indeed capable of
network-centric warfare?
Also unknown is how mature is their sensor fusion and to what extent the term
joint is really joint within the PLA? And finally, since the J-35 – or whatever
its designation may be – is still relaying on interim engines, there remains
the engine issue. And concerning stealth and China, the true mystery still
remains the H-20 bomber.
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