Zhuhai Airshow display reveals info on China’s J-20, J-16 inventory
By Mike Yeo
Nov 8, 04:21 PM
A Chinese J-20 stealth fighter performs at the 2022 Zhuhai Airshow in China on Nov. 8, 2022. (CNS/AFP via Getty Images)
MELBOURNE,
Australia — China has at least 200 stealthy J-20 fighters and more than 240 J-16
multirole strike aircraft in service, based on analysis of construction numbers
painted on the jets by a Chinese military aviation expert.
Andreas
Rupprecht, who has authored several books on China’s military aviation industry
and the People’s Liberation Army Air Force, told Defense News that based on the
construction numbers seen on the jets at the Zhuhai Airshow, there have been four
production batches of the J-20 and 11 batches of J-16s.
He
noted that two of the Chengdu J-20 fighters at the show had
“CB0369″ and “CB0370″ painted in small letters behind the canopy of the jets.
Based on previous examples seen in public or on photos and videos released by
China, “CB03″ would indicate the jets were from the fourth production batch,
with “CB00″ being the first.
The
last two digits of the construction number indicate the running number of that
particular batch, with the jets at the air show being the 69th and 70th
aircraft in the fourth production batch of J-20s.
He
added that, based on his previous research, his “conservative estimate” is that
the previous three production batches of J-20s had at least 18, 46 and 56
airframes, respectively. And adding 70 aircraft to the fourth batch and
approximately 18 low-rate production platforms would bring the total J-20
production to 208 aircraft.
The
presence of J-20s on static display at the air show has allowed photographers
to obtain better resolution images of the aircraft than previously possible.
The jets at the show, which runs Nov. 8-13, were powered by indigenous WS-10C
engines and features low-observable sawtooth edges on their afterburner
nozzles.
Justin
Bronk, a senior research fellow for air power and technology at the U.K.-based
think tank Royal United Services Institute, said “the surface detail shots show
just how much progress the Chinese aircraft industry has made on manufacturing
tolerance and quality control.”
Bronk
told Defense News that based on photos of the J-20 low-rate initial production
aircraft, which took part in the flying display at the 2018 Zhuhai Airshow,
“China continues to make progress in closing the gap with U.S. low-observable
designs.”
Meanwhile,
the J-16 on static display this year carried the construction number “1105″ on
the outside of its air intakes. According to Rupprecht, this indicates the
aircraft was the fifth one of the 11th production batch.
Visitors look at a
J-16 multirole strike fighter of the People's Liberation Army Air Force at the
2021 Zhuhai Airshow in China. (Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images)
He
added that Shenyang Aircraft Corp., which manufactures the J-16, uses a more
straightforward construction number and production batch system, with each
batch numbering 24 aircraft. This means the aircraft at the show — which is
assigned to the 172nd Air Brigade of the People’s Liberation Army Air Force —
is the 245th production J-16.
The J-16 started entering PLAAF service in
2015. It is based on the Chinese J-11B interceptor and the Russian Sukhoi
Su-30MK series, both of which can trace their lineage back to the Sukhoi Su-27
Flanker interceptor.
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