I have a hard time believing the kill ratio's in exercises show the true combat capabilities of a fighter, IF they are indeed true. There are allways ROE that are inteded to have a sertain result, that how you train for particular scenario's. So just because the PLAAF states that its first ever locally designed and built fighter gets 8:1 (or whatever) kill ratio's over one of the best fighters the russians have ever designed, doesent make it so IMO.
Lol. These exercises have started since the summer of 2003 when the J-10s hit IOC, and goes all the way up to now. Don't tell me that for all these years, involving multiple regiments of all three aircraft in all different regions, that the ROEs are going to be the same for every encounter.
And the J-10 not the first ever locally designed and built fighter.
The original J-12 (a daylight only light fighter) got the honor of this in 1966.
Then comes the J-8Is and the J-8IIs, which is practically a different fighter from the first, with only a 30 percent commonality. And then the JH-7 which is a strike jet.
Mate are you kidding me??????? You cant see the HUGE PR opportunity at having your first locally designed and built fighter be more capable than the russian design you bought, especially since you've been producing obsolete russian designs for 40 years.
Learn more about the PLAAF aircraft. Its not the first locally designed and built fighter not by far.
By having the J10 win the PLAF stating to the world and its own people "look how clever we are! the closest thing we've designed to a fighter before is a tractor and now our 1st gen attempt is better than a evolved 4th gen russian design to the tune of an 8:1 kill ratio". Your right i'm sure there was no bias toward the "local boys" in those exerscises, especially given the PRC expertise at propaganda and information manipulation. And you think the fact that the J11 is locally manufactured means there is no propaganda value in having the J10 kill it by stupid ratio's???? Please!!
Chengdu is not considered the premier fighter company in China, at least in the eyes of the CCP and the PLA. It is Shenyang, the ones who are making the J-11. It is Shenyang that built the J-5, the J-6, reverse engineered the J-7, designed and built the J-8I and J-8II. It is a city at the north and the east, not far from Beijing, and that already means regional bias. And when something is locally manufactured, yeah, that means there are people in high places that is going to have their financial stake on it. This interest can outweigh propaganda value. And it is not as if the PLAAF has not followed up with its belief---it did. It stopped ordering both J-11 and Su-30MKK.
And what makes you think the PLAAF or the CCP favors Chengdu just because it is the "local boy". The powers at be poured tons of money into Shenyang developing the J-11B, and guess who gets the WS-10A first. The J-11B not the J-10. Shenyang certainly thinks that this is not over.
Look i'm not saying the J10 is a bad platform or discounting the huge achievement the programe is for the PRC and the PLA. It is a truely remarkable acievement considering you were producing J6's not so long ago. However when i hear people stating that J10's regularly shoot down modern flankers in exercises with kill to loss ratio's of 5:1, 8:1 whatever, and therefore are more capable air superiority platforms i am slightly schepticle. Given the fact that this is PROC's first locally designed fighter, the huge propaganda value in its sucsess and the Chinese Communist parties history with information manipulation it is HIGHLY unrealistic to summise that the J10 is a more capable air superiority platform than the chinese flanker just because PLAAF's says so and has exercise kill ratio's to "proove" it.
First of all what the PLAAF has for Flankers are not even remotely MODERN.
Its a generic Su-27 that has been slightly improved. I laugh at some people even saying it has better BVR than a J-10. The standard Su-27 does not even have the R-77, uses the R-27 SARH. The J-10 has the ARH PL-12 as its standard. If you put an F-16 with AMRAAM against an F-15 with a Sparrow, guess who is going to win.
The PLAAF J-11s are said to be modified for the R-77 and there is credible evidence to that (Jane's). However the numbers of R-77 are suspect and would probably allocated to the Su-30MKKs as priority. So R-27 equipped Su-27s against PL-12 wielding planes, the Su-27s are going to get owned. The Su-27s have better chance at WVR due to the HMS and R-73 HOBS missiles.
As for the Su-30MKK, its not that much improved over an Su-27. It lacks TVC and canards. Its not like an MKI or an Su-35 which would be considered top end. An Su-30MKK is considered low end and is primarily a strike jet.
It is Shenyang's J-11B that is at least, what you can say has the semblence of being modern---MFDs, glass cockpit, slotted planar array with microprocessor based electronics with ARH missile support, digital FBW, etc,. The Chinese have spent a lot of R/D overhauling the aircraft---700kg lighter than the standard Su-27, with an airframe that boast 10,000 flight hours (superior to the alleged J-10's 4000 to 6000 hours), plus radar reduction measures on the front edges and intake lid of the aircraft in order to lower the RCS to 3m2. The WS-10A is rated roughly at 29,000lbs each (13200kg), which is better than the 27,500lbs used on the AL-31F/FN (as used on the J-11 and J-10).
Local boy? It looks like its the J-11B being prepped as China's premier fighter. The fighter now appears to be entering an IOC/small batch production set, and so there is going to be plenty of opportunities to test the J-11B against the J-10.
The J-11B will equalize to better the radar, sensor and avionics suite of the J-10. Even if the radar is equal technology, the J-11B's larger radar would make it superior (both J-10 and J-11B's radar are from the same firm). This will provide a more even match in terms of airframe and aerodynamics. Then further down the line, the J-11B will itself be tested against uprated J-10s (with the WS-10A this time). Testing with the JF-17s will provide another interesting factor on DAC.
So this is far from over and it is growing to become a full rivalry between Shenyang and Chengdu.