The poster on Pakdef known as Eagle Hannan is a Pakistani engineer who works in Nanjing, China.He speaks both Urdu and Chinese fluently. He is a serious militaryaviation enthusiast. The city he comes from in China, Nanjing, is alsothe home of two of the J-10 pilots from the PLAAF that participated inthe Zhuhai Air Show, 2010. He stayed at the same hotel as the PAFpilots and had many conversations with them as well as the PLAAFpilots. . Hannan attended all three public holidays and spent all threedays with pilots and senior officers. Hannan has managed to collect alarge amount of information and media and these have been cleared bysenior personnel from the PAF for public release.
What follows is a summary of Eagle Hannan's posts from Pakdef.
Hannan describes the aerobatics display of the JF-17 as brilliant. TheJF-17 flew twice every day of the air show. He notes that the weatherconditions were very bad and hard to take videos in. He said that theJ-10s did not perform particularly well. Hannan comments that in 14minutes of display there was a single performance of 360 and threehalf-hearted loops. He observes that the rest of the displays by theJ-10 were formation flights. He notes that one of the Sherdil pilotscomments about the J-10 pilots in Punjabi that the old men of Chinacannot fly their own planes.
What follows is a summary of Eagle Hannan's posts from Pakdef.
Hannan describes the aerobatics display of the JF-17 as brilliant. TheJF-17 flew twice every day of the air show. He notes that the weatherconditions were very bad and hard to take videos in. He said that theJ-10s did not perform particularly well. Hannan comments that in 14minutes of display there was a single performance of 360 and threehalf-hearted loops. He observes that the rest of the displays by theJ-10 were formation flights. He notes that one of the Sherdil pilotscomments about the J-10 pilots in Punjabi that the old men of Chinacannot fly their own planes.
In comparison, the JF-17s did much better. Hannan describes the Chinesecrowd as going “wild” with the Thunder’s repeated tight turns, withouta single one off-target from the venue.
In his conversations with the PAF, he has found out the following:
1. JF-17s will not have CFTs (Conformal Fuel Tanks).
2. The present batch of JF-17s has certain non-Chinese subsystems.
3. Air to Air missile tests for both WVR and BVR are complete.
4. PAF is impressed with the performance of SD-10s and confirms that the missile is comparable to the AMRAAM-Cs.
5. An improved SD-10s, designated here as SD-10Bs withimproved range, seeker, new motor and better seeker has been tested inChina on the FC-1. These missiles are marginally lighter than the firstgeneration and are in the same standard as the best Western BVR AAMs.
The weight of the SD-10Bs still remains slightly greater than theAMRAAM Cs but this is not an issue anymore because the performance isequal or superior. The missiles displayed in Zhuhai were not the newgeneration SD-10Bs but the earlier model. PAF order for the SD-10Bs will be fulfilled before PLAAF. Previousmodels will be upgraded to the new SD-10B standard. [Author’s note:this may suggest that PAF have provided critical input for the SD-10Bs]
6. PAF will standardize to this SD-10Bs. First 50 will have PL-9Cs as standard WVR missiles.
7. A new radar will possibly be used in the Block II JF-17sand the first block will be upgraded. These are likely to be AESAradars with a swash-plate, similar to the Gripen NG.
8. JF-17 radars are designed to be fully multirole.
9. Various new guided munitions are being tested in China. Theseinclude SDBs (Small Diameter Bombs) ideal for the light fighter class.
10. PAF’s second squadron of JF-17s is almost ready and flight trials are earmarked for early next year.
11. China is confirmed (yet again and without any doubt whatsoever) tobuy the FC-1s. Consequently, production is being expanded in Pakistan’sproduction facilities, Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC), to meet thedemand. These facilities are located in Kamra.
12. Close cooperation on the J-10B is taking place. The level ofcooperation has been significantly expanded since 2009. The size of thecooperation is described as literally a small city-like facility toaccommodate PAF and Pakistani civilian engineers. Hannan confirmed thatcivilian engineers from PAC are also part of the cooperation in China.
13. The J-10B will have Chinese radar and western subsystems will allow it to be integrated with Erieye and Chinese AWACS.This is not an assumption and Eagle Hannan, who is a telecom engineerhimself, confirms that this is not a technical problem and reconfirmsfrom PAF. There is no problem as long as the protocol messages andhandshake procedures are known. He found out that PAF has a solution interms of the middleware.
14. The middleware will not only be via a C4I but also directcommunication middleware. Some of these are being developed in-houseand some are being imported.
15. Whether JF-17s can data link with Erieye has not been confirmed dueto diplomatic/political reasons. However, Hannan notes that from hisdiscussions, it is implicitly obvious that they definitely can.
16. IFR (In-Flight Refueling) will be installed in later batches. These will be fixed IFRs and not retractable. [Author’snote: radar signature and aerodynamics penalty paid for simplicity ofconstruction, cost and maintenance]. The JF-17s were designed from theground-up to have IFRs installed.
17. Next block of JF-17s will have IRST (Infra-Red Search & Track) similar to those installed on the J-10B.
18. Pakistani ALCM Raad and H2/H4 ASM will be integrated andwas a major reason why Pakistan has chosen to go with Chinese radarsfor Block 2 JF-17s.
19. Advanced composites have been tested for use on the Block2 JF-17s. Present JF-17s also use some composites. J-10B/FC-20 isdesigned from inception from new advanced composites. FC-20s in PAFservice will form the top tier in the PAF (above the F-16 Block 52+).
20. PAF denied any collaboration in Chinese 5th generation fighterprogram as this is a capability they are not familiar with. PAF seniorofficials stated that:
We cannot help develop a capability we don’t know. Like we don’t knowwhat kind of sensor suite is in F-22 other than what we find fromopen-source. Such capability/requirement generation is not Air Forcejob but such technology information is brought in by other means[Hannan notes: espionage or intelligence I think this is what hemeant]. We all know F-22 is stealth but what else it can do is what wedon’t know. JF-17s are developed because we knew what we wanted from a4th generation fighter as we already had an experience with capability,either by existing systems or by our collaboration with other airforces. Even US Air force only comes to know new capabilities when it’spresented to it. Chinese on the other hand, have the means to bringsuch information and develop on such information and PAF does not.We'll see what they bring up.
good work but there's no need to talk down the J-10s or their performance in the airshow. JF-17 did great and chinese were excited but J-10 put up a great show equally well. The J-10 is an amazing fighter destined to become a real force multiplier by 2015 when its entirely upgraded form, the J10B comes out. Don't get too excited. I particularly do not like this line: "He notes that one of the Sherdil pilots comments about the J-10 pilots in Punjabi that the old men of China cannot fly their own planes. ". PAF pilots do not make petty comments like these. Bad report in this sense. Otherwise good information in between.
ReplyDeletePAF pilot can't make such comments in front of civilians. may b he was saying some thing else in Punjabi. . . Chines pilots are great i have seen may air performances of j-10 other than china air show.
ReplyDeleteThe article is correct.
ReplyDeleteChinese men can't fly fighters. Remember korean war, Russian pilots had to put makeup like Chinese and fight against USAF.