WaPo hit piece on China

N&P: Discuss governments, nations, politics and recent related news here.

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital

Post Reply
Pelranius
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3539
Joined: 2006-10-24 11:35am
Location: Around and about the Beltway

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Pelranius »

Vympel wrote:Shep, the WS-10A turbofan isn't that big a deal. Wow, they have an AL-31F equivalent engine ... 30 years after the AL-31F came out. Ummm, yay? As of April last year, there were quality control problems with the engine and they were still having to order AL-31Fs to make up the difference, IIRC.


I really don't think one can assume they'll be going from quality control problems with an AL-31F class engine (i.e. distinctly fourth generation) to a fifth generation engine for their fighter anytime soon. It'll be years yet.
The WS-10A is happily in service with the J-11BS (they're still ordering AL-31Fs for the older J-11 and J-10 because it would cost too much to retrofit them all to accept WS-10As, to say nothing of waiting for the production line to churn out 400 WS-10 engines.

The WS-15 already completed its first full scale test run. I expect high altitude testing will start next year.
Anyway, my thoughts:-
Also, the J-20 prototype may have taxiied -- there goes the rationale for PAK-FA on the world export market.
Ummm ... why? Not only does the J-20 not have a hope of being ready before the PAK FA is (unless the Chinese pull fifth generation engines out of their ass with some sort of magic spell in the next year or so, or buy them from elsewhere, the only place being Russia), but the PAK FA already has a customer, being India. Who's going to be lining up for the J-20 (and can afford to pay?) Those bottom feeders in Pakistan, after scrounging together a few bucks for their quaint little JF-17s?
I personally doubt the J-XX is going to be exported (most of the Chinese customers who can afford it have ties with the United States (meaning that they can buy the F-35 or the CMC will have fits about USAF personnel walking all over the plane) or they're nutcases like Iran.
Another thing - those JF-17s are equipped with RD-93 engines from Russia. And where's their strategic bombers - oh that's right they've got no engines for such a thing either ... hmmm. It seems that partying about the WS-10A being the most orgasmic piece of "we have the technology" hardware like its 1980 (almost literally) doesn't mean China has solved its problem with engines, does it? :P
The first JF-17 with the WS-13 engine flew back in May (I think) of 2010. There isn't a place for strategic bombers in Chinese doctrine, so no need (they built a six engined derivative of the Tu-16 back in the 1970s, but nothing came of it.
Probably because the C-919 is a paper plane that won't even fly until 2014 - as a commercial airliner. There ain't no transport / tanker version of this coming out of the pipeline - or even anywhere on the horizon - anytime in the foreseeable future. Il-476/Il-478 is already being built.
There's the Y-20 transport with a MTOW of 200 tons. I believe it's being built by XAC, a fullscale mockup has been built already, first flight should be around 2011/12.
Probably because the HQ-9 sucks balls in comparison. And do we know they're rolling off like hotcakes? China's still been buying S-300PM series the entire time the HQ-9 has been in existence, its a fairy tale to think the HQ-9 is some sort of S-400 replacement.
The HQ-9 is a pretty decent system, with its largest missile having a range of 200km, electronically scanned radars and I believe the latest version having an active missile seeker radar (or so JANES claims, make of that what you will, they also said Russia already sold 117S to China, which I personally find hard to believe). There are 64 HQ-9 launchers in service (according to the 2008 DoD report), there are 128 S-300 launchers in China. 64 of those S-300, namely the S-300PMU and S-300PMU1, where purchased in 1991 and 1994, which is before the HQ-9 entered service in 2001. China is likely to have continued purchasing the S-300PMU1/2 because they're trying to maximize their long range SAM coverage, despite the logistical difficulties of having two different systems.
Unlikely. Take their new AEGIS-type DDGs and so forth ... they've got how many of them? Oh, two. Awesome. Seriously, how many more DDGs do you think they'll have in the water by 2020, at this rate? Have they even laid down a new DDG since the last ones? Not so far as I know. I mean, sure, its possible they'll lay down and launch 10 AEGIS ships in the next 10 years. But is it likely? Not really, no. Will it make them a threat to the USN? Not really, no.
The Chinese just completed another 052C this year, another one is being outfitted and Jiangnan shipyard (the builder of all 052C models to date) is working on two more destroyer hulls, which are presumably more 052C DDGs. The long wait time is probably best explained by extensive debugging and testing of the 052C's battle management system.

So what? China tries very hard to maintain a high-tech veneer of oooh scary look how tough and modern and awesome we are - but how much of this stuff do they actually have? Do you even know? Does anybody? Do you know if their ZBD-2000s etc are even any good? Should anyone really care that they made an amphibious tank, which is hardly a big deal? And did they build them without help? Unlikely, given their latest IFV design has a (less sophisticated) almost straight copy of KBP Tula's Bakhcha-U turret on them, yes?

How about their awesome-sauce Type 99 Main Battle Tank (which is actually a piece of overrated rubbish, which is what you'd expect when you kitbash a T-72 hull with no experience*, but anyway)? How many of them have they built in 10 years? Oh, about 200, can't afford to build more, unit price too high, build the simpler Type 96s instead. Yeah, not exactly the armored horde of the USSR there.
There are 400-600 ZTZ-99s out there now.
* Specifically, due to poor design, the thickness of the armor at the 30-35 degrees angle is a mere 350mm - the figure for the latest Soviet/Russian tanks is about 600mm from all angles. Roof armor at the front is also weak, and the tank has inherited the weakness of the porthole and hatch areas from the old Soviet designs. The dimensions of the Type 99 turret make any substantial improvements in its built-in protection system all but impossible. The use of the powerful - yet massive - MTU diesel (from Germany) made the Chinese add an extra meter to the tank’s length, bringing its weight to 54 metric tons, despite having shitty armor - and the imported engines is another reason why so few of this overpriced piece of shit have been built so far. So compared to say, a T-90A, the Type 99's a heavier tank with weaker armor, that's been kneecapped by shit engineering. That's apparently what you get when you copy individual design elements from different sources when they don't fit together very well and aren't part of a coherent vehicle design philosophy based on experience. But hey, its got what looks like a CITV knock-off, so it must be kickass, right? :P
I don't suppose you have a source for this?
Turns out that a five way cross over between It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the Ali G Show, Fargo, Idiocracy and Veep is a lot less funny when you're actually living in it.
User avatar
Bakustra
Sith Devotee
Posts: 2822
Joined: 2005-05-12 07:56pm
Location: Neptune Violon Tide!

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Bakustra »

Questor wrote:
Bakustra wrote:Yes, I'm probably on the wrong board to be discussing literature when so many people express their contempt for art- wait, I think you're talking about how your reply was combative. I don't really have a problem with that, but rather with the idea that you're overanalyzing if you dare to suggest that a work of the Second Red Scare was influenced by propaganda, or that ideas can be transmitted through art. This is worrying not only because it's ignorant of many important definitions of art, but also because propaganda is merely a form of advertisement, and denying the effects of advertisement is frankly harmful to you and to your ability to think critically. So it vexes me a little.
Right, my disagreement with your characterization of Starship Troopers as Pro-America propaganda means that I don't know what propaganda is. It couldn't possibly be a legitimate disagreement with you. There's certainly not ANY better examples of pro-american propaganda during the entire red scare. Certainly nothing that doesn't have the decidedly mixed messages of Starship Troopers, where what leaps of the page are anti-communist messages, rather than a condemnation of just about every political concept in of the 20th century from communism to democracy.

So, since I am so obviously inferior to your outstanding intellect, I suppose I should admit defeat and cower in front of the mighty Bakustra - who wants to protect naive little me from the effects of advertising?
Your sarcasm falls a little flat, seeing as you are still insisting on arguing against a strawman. I suppose that my modest intellect might seem towering compared to that, but don't be so hard on yourself. I'm not saying that it's propaganda, but rather influenced by propaganda. There's a pretty major difference.

You see, when you make arguments by quoting Sigmund Freud's inability to self-analyze, I, at least, will assume you're trying to dismiss the idea altogether, rather than disagreeing because of things x, y, and z. So if you want to disagree honestly, then don't try to dismiss things. It's frankly needlessly hostile. Dismissing the power of propaganda itself is also dangerous beyond that, but whatever, I'm sure you'll deny that so you can pack as much sarcasm into your post as possible.
Invited by the new age, the elegant Sailor Neptune!
I mean, how often am I to enter a game of riddles with the author, where they challenge me with some strange and confusing and distracting device, and I'm supposed to unravel it and go "I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE" and take great personal satisfaction and pride in our mutual cleverness?
- The Handle, from the TVTropes Forums
User avatar
MKSheppard
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Posts: 29842
Joined: 2002-07-06 06:34pm

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by MKSheppard »

As of April last year, there were quality control problems with the engine and they were still having to order AL-31Fs to make up the difference, IIRC.
Then why are J-11Bs coming out of the factory with them, and the new J-10B having a redesigned inlet to accomodate it?
I really don't think one can assume they'll be going from quality control problems with an AL-31F class engine (i.e. distinctly fourth generation) to a fifth generation engine for their fighter anytime soon. It'll be years yet.
No you don't. You only need a "fifth" generation engine if your aircraft is going to be carrying out high alpha manouvers and dogfighting with F-22As.

Existing fourth generation engines are well into the territory in terms of thrust that the J93 pioneered forty years ago for high altitude supercruise.

Granted; you would probably need to design a new engine around a fourth generation core; because fourth generation engines (and many fifth) are still designed around the assumption that you will do very high alpha flight with all the turbulent, nasty airflow coming in that that causes -- a direct lead out of the whole vietnam mess forty years ago where visual range dogfighting was caused by RoEs and caused the wrong kind of lessons to be learned.
Who's going to be lining up for the J-20 (and can afford to pay?) Those bottom feeders in Pakistan, after scrounging together a few bucks for their quaint little JF-17s?
Left out of your comments about the JF-17 is what it's replacing in Pakistan -- J-7s, A-5s, Mirage IIIs and Mirage 5s -- all designs from the 1960s.

It doesn't have to be a super hot kill all death machine to fulfill it's design goal -- a cheap, effective replacement for aging Sino-Soviet exported crapbuckets around the world -- not everyone can afford to pay close to $60+ million for F-15SGs like Singapore did. (actually the price was $83m per plane, but it was probably a package deal with support and spares included).

And by the time the J-20 is available for export around 2020 (which will be about the time PAK-FA actually does enter service), the world will be significantly richer and seeking another round of arms deals to replace existing hardware.

Since the F-22 is unexportable, and that the F-35 comes with a lot of contract agreements binding you to the US; it'll come down to either the PAK-FA and J-14/20 (some rumors are that it was redesignated to J-14).
Another thing - those JF-17s are equipped with RD-93 engines from Russia.
Never mind that a test mule JF-17 was flying in August 2010 with a WS-13 engine -- which began serial production in 2009. It was designed to replace the RD-93.

Give a few years, and deliveries of the JF-17 will be with the WS-13 -- meaning there will be no more need for Pakistan or any future buyers of the JF-17 to get Putin's permission for engines.
And where's their strategic bombers - oh that's right they've got no engines for such a thing either ... hmmm.
Again, China is behaving like Western Analysts expected the USSR to behave during the 1960-1970 period.

Let me quote something from the 1964 CIA NIE on USSR Strategic Forces:

"We do not believe that the USSR aims at matching the U.S. in numbers of intercontinental delivery vehicles. Recognition that the U.S. would detect and match or overmatch such an effort, together with economic constraints, appears to have ruled out this option."

:lol:

The RED CHINESE are basically accepting strategic inferiority vis-a-vis with Russia and the United States in favor of modernizing their whole military-industrial-complex with the monies saved.

Keeping their SSBNs in port and having them do brief forays away from port saves them a lot of money in constructing a global communications network and navigational network to service the SSBNs -- the US put up several dedicated satellite networks alone to service POLARIS.
It seems that partying about the WS-10A being the most orgasmic piece of "we have the technology" hardware like its 1980 (almost literally) doesn't mean China has solved its problem with engines, does it? :P
Considering you could do Mach 3 supercruise with 1960s turbojets; yes, I would say pretty much. You only need super advanced engines producing umtpy billion lbf of thrust if you are building a supermanouverable fighter or VTOLOL plane.
Probably because the C-919 is a paper plane that won't even fly until 2014 - as a commercial airliner.
Considering that a significant portion of a nose for the C919 has been built and demonstrated, it's no paper plane -- and given the propensity for heavy commercial airliners to get tanker proposals...we will see a tanker variant of the C919 proposed in a few years.
Il-476/Il-478 is already being built.
Again, why should China buy them after the disastrous experience it had with the Il-76/78?

The terms were really quite simple in 2005 -- get 38 x IL-76MDs and four IL-78s -- and get them in a reasonable amount of time -- since many of the airframes were already partially assembled at the plant. First delivery under the contract was to be 2007.

Two years pass, it's 2007 and not a single damn one has been delivered.

Then the Russians say: "Hey wait, we can't filfill your order, but we can offer you a great deal on a BRAND NEW PLANE WITH NEW ENGINES AND AVONICS!" and offer to annul the contract for the -76MDs and replace it with the IL-76MF.

Things drag on; it's 2008 and still no damn delivery. Drag some more on....drag some more on. 2009. No delivery.

Somewhere around 2007 it appears that the PRC leadership decided that the PLAAF's future transport fleet will consist of Y-9s and Y-20s to be built entirely in the PRC.

The Y-9 will have 25-30 tonnes of cargo capacity and is essentially the C-130J in rough performance, and will have a very large percentage of indigenous equipment. Prototypes are being built and photos exist of them.

The Y-20 will have 50 tonnes of payload and is essentially somewhere between the A-400M and C-17. Detailed design work is proceeding on it.
Probably because the HQ-9 sucks balls in comparison. And do we know they're rolling off like hotcakes?
There are roughly ten battalions equipped with the HQ-9. Six are with the 17th Brigade in Western China; three are around Nanking, and one is around Beijing.

This compares quite well with the 15 or so S-300 battalions of varying versions they have.
China's still been buying S-300PM series the entire time the HQ-9 has been in existence
Considering that the HQ-9 has only been around since 1997 in active service; this is not surprising, particularly as they needed to debug the system, while S-300 was mostly bug-free in that time frame, having gone through that debugging in the 1980s while under PVO service.
its a fairy tale to think the HQ-9 is some sort of S-400 replacement.
Again, why do they need S-400 as a base for future arms purchases? They already have everything they need due to the HQ-19 deal; and for ABM purposes, they've already begun to increase the capabilities of the HQ-9.
Unlikely. Take their new AEGIS-type DDGs and so forth ... they've got how many of them? Oh, two. Awesome.
And how many surface combatants does the Russian Navy have with phased arrays?

Oh right, zero.

Oh sure, you have the Pr22350, but that won't be in the water until 2011.
Have they even laid down a new DDG since the last ones? Not so far as I know.
Early in 2010, the two active Type 052Cs were spotted in a shipyard undergoing some form of deep modernization, and in November 2010 two more Type 052Cs were spotted under construction.

Type 052C under construction

This only makes sense as it probably took the PLA(N) about a decade of using the 052Cs as a pair of trials ships to fully integrate and master all the complex technologies inherent in them.
Will it make them a threat to the USN? Not really, no.
Far more of a threat than the Russian Fleet; or any other credible opponent.
So what? China tries very hard to maintain a high-tech veneer of oooh scary look how tough and modern and awesome we are - but how much of this stuff do they actually have? Do you even know? Does anybody?
The Amphibious IFV was designated ZBD-05 when it entered service, and the amphibious light tank was ZTL-05.

As for how many?

I've seen photographs of huge lineups of the damn things in both PLA Marine Corps Blue and PLA Army Amphibious Green/Tan.

The PLA Marine Corps has two brigades. The 1st Brigade is fully equipped with the new Amphibious IFVs; while the 164th Brigade is still equipped with the older bolt-on stuff.

They also launched the second Type 071 LPD back in November. So the PLA Marine Corps' capability is improving.
Do you know if their ZBD-2000s etc are even any good? Should anyone really care that they made an amphibious tank, which is hardly a big deal? And did they build them without help? Unlikely, given their latest IFV design has a (less sophisticated) almost straight copy of KBP Tula's Bakhcha-U turret on them, yes?
Considering that the ZBD-05 and ZTL-05 both use hydroplaning hulls and mechanisms that have more in common with the perennially delayed USMC EFV than any Russian vehicle ever built....I'd say it's indigenous.
How about their awesome-sauce Type 99 Main Battle Tank (which is actually a piece of overrated rubbish, which is what you'd expect when you kitbash a T-72 hull with no experience*, but anyway)?
Their tank lineage comes from two sources:

T-54As provided via Russian Military Assistance before the Sino-Soviet Split
T-62 captured in 1969 border conflict with USSR.

They MAY have acquired T-72s in the 1980s from the Iran/Iraq conflict -- give us a captured tank in exchange for our aid to you -- but this is not confirmed or reliable.

Honestly, the existence of a splash guard on early ZTZ-99s before they gained ERA bricks is not definite proof of T-72 clone lineage. If that was the case, then Arjun would be a T-72 clone.

Considering that all prior Chinese MBT development traced it's lineage back to the T-54A and improved versions thereof, and that the ZTZ-99 has so many different design decisions made compared to the T-72 (welded/angular turret vs cast/rounded) among others...it's not a clone.

In fact, the ZTZ-99 could have been a Merkava clone -- apparently some engineers argued for that during the development phase which began in 1984 and continued til 1999.
How many of them have they built in 10 years? Oh, about 200, can't afford to build more, unit price too high, build the simpler Type 96s instead.
Actually in 2008 the Chinese had about 341 Type 99s in service, and by the summer of 2009 they had 372-465 Type 99s in service. This correlates well with rumors of production being about 100 tanks a year.

This compares quite nicely to actual T-90 numbers in the Russian Army or India. :mrgreen:
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
User avatar
Zaune
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 7553
Joined: 2010-06-21 11:05am
Location: In Transit
Contact:

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Zaune »

Just as an aside, if China ever wants a strategic bomber they've got a fair selection of airliner engines -or whole airliners for that matter- to back-engineer, and I've an idea they manufacture some of their own spares under license already.
There are hardly any excesses of the most crazed psychopath that cannot easily be duplicated by a normal kindly family man who just comes in to work every day and has a job to do.
-- (Terry Pratchett, Small Gods)


Replace "ginger" with "n*gger," and suddenly it become a lot less funny, doesn't it?
-- fgalkin


Like my writing? Tip me on Patreon

I Have A Blog
User avatar
Vympel
Spetsnaz
Spetsnaz
Posts: 29312
Joined: 2002-07-19 01:08am
Location: Sydney Australia

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Vympel »

MKSheppard wrote: Then why are J-11Bs coming out of the factory with them, and the new J-10B having a redesigned inlet to accomodate it?
Yes, and? All I'm saying is that Chinese engine technology is still quite young, which casts serious doubts on this weirdly triumphal talk about how awesome the Chinese are all of a sudden.
No you don't. You only need a "fifth" generation engine if your aircraft is going to be carrying out high alpha manouvers and dogfighting with F-22As.

Existing fourth generation engines are well into the territory in terms of thrust that the J93 pioneered forty years ago for high altitude supercruise.

Granted; you would probably need to design a new engine around a fourth generation core; because fourth generation engines (and many fifth) are still designed around the assumption that you will do very high alpha flight with all the turbulent, nasty airflow coming in that that causes -- a direct lead out of the whole vietnam mess forty years ago where visual range dogfighting was caused by RoEs and caused the wrong kind of lessons to be learned.
If the J-20 isn't going to have a fifth generation engine anytime soon, then its hardly going to be a credible F-22A competitor, right?
Left out of your comments about the JF-17 is what it's replacing in Pakistan -- J-7s, A-5s, Mirage IIIs and Mirage 5s -- all designs from the 1960s.

It doesn't have to be a super hot kill all death machine to fulfill it's design goal -- a cheap, effective replacement for aging Sino-Soviet exported crapbuckets around the world -- not everyone can afford to pay close to $60+ million for F-15SGs like Singapore did. (actually the price was $83m per plane, but it was probably a package deal with support and spares included).
Missing the point - which is not the JF-17 is a mediocre plane (its fine for what its intended to do), but who's going to be lining up for a J-20?
And by the time the J-20 is available for export around 2020 (which will be about the time PAK-FA actually does enter service), the world will be significantly richer and seeking another round of arms deals to replace existing hardware.

Since the F-22 is unexportable, and that the F-35 comes with a lot of contract agreements binding you to the US; it'll come down to either the PAK-FA and J-14/20 (some rumors are that it was redesignated to J-14).
There's no guarantee at all the world will be significantly richer in 2020.
Never mind that a test mule JF-17 was flying in August 2010 with a WS-13 engine -- which began serial production in 2009. It was designed to replace the RD-93.

Give a few years, and deliveries of the JF-17 will be with the WS-13 -- meaning there will be no more need for Pakistan or any future buyers of the JF-17 to get Putin's permission for engines.
Testing is all very well and good, but I'm supposed to be impressed they're coming up with an indigenous replacement for the RD-33 series in 2010? Again, my intention is not to rubbish China, but to moderate all this weird Rising Dragon talk.
Again, China is behaving like Western Analysts expected the USSR to behave during the 1960-1970 period.

Let me quote something from the 1964 CIA NIE on USSR Strategic Forces:

"We do not believe that the USSR aims at matching the U.S. in numbers of intercontinental delivery vehicles. Recognition that the U.S. would detect and match or overmatch such an effort, together with economic constraints, appears to have ruled out this option."

:lol:

The RED CHINESE are basically accepting strategic inferiority vis-a-vis with Russia and the United States in favor of modernizing their whole military-industrial-complex with the monies saved.

Keeping their SSBNs in port and having them do brief forays away from port saves them a lot of money in constructing a global communications network and navigational network to service the SSBNs -- the US put up several dedicated satellite networks alone to service POLARIS.
I don't think there's any evidence that they haven't got strategic bombers by conscious choice as opposed to simply not having the technology to build some on their own. Simply look at the H-6.
Considering you could do Mach 3 supercruise with 1960s turbojets; yes, I would say pretty much. You only need super advanced engines producing umtpy billion lbf of thrust if you are building a supermanouverable fighter or VTOLOL plane.
So anyone's supposed to be scared of the J-20 then? Come on man, if this thing's going to be a credible fifth-generation fighter, it needs a proper engine. No one's buying this thing if its got 1960s turbojets. :)
Considering that a significant portion of a nose for the C919 has been built and demonstrated, it's no paper plane -- and given the propensity for heavy commercial airliners to get tanker proposals...we will see a tanker variant of the C919 proposed in a few years.
Again, it won't even fly for the first time until 2014. There's not going to be any tanker variant of the C919 in a few years. 2014 itself is a few years. That assumes the C919 is actually going to find success as a commercial airliner too, btw.
Again, why should China buy them after the disastrous experience it had with the Il-76/78?
Because they might need them? I'm not saying I know for a fact whether they will or won't get them, but appealing to future aeroplanes that aren't even in service as a reason why not is specious.
There are roughly ten battalions equipped with the HQ-9. Six are with the 17th Brigade in Western China; three are around Nanking, and one is around Beijing.

This compares quite well with the 15 or so S-300 battalions of varying versions they have.

Considering that the HQ-9 has only been around since 1997 in active service; this is not surprising, particularly as they needed to debug the system, while S-300 was mostly bug-free in that time frame, having gone through that debugging in the 1980s while under PVO service.

Again, why do they need S-400 as a base for future arms purchases? They already have everything they need due to the HQ-19 deal; and for ABM purposes, they've already begun to increase the capabilities of the HQ-9.
Probably for the same reason that they needed the S-300 when they had the HQ-9? Again, I'm not saying that they'll definitely get it, but there is precedent.
And how many surface combatants does the Russian Navy have with phased arrays?

Oh right, zero.

Oh sure, you have the Pr22350, but that won't be in the water until 2011.
This isn't a contest with Russia Shep. Russia has absolutely nothing to do with this topic. I'm merely pointing out this Rising Dragon stuff is overstated.
Early in 2010, the two active Type 052Cs were spotted in a shipyard undergoing some form of deep modernization, and in November 2010 two more Type 052Cs were spotted under construction.

Type 052C under construction

This only makes sense as it probably took the PLA(N) about a decade of using the 052Cs as a pair of trials ships to fully integrate and master all the complex technologies inherent in them.
Great, at this rate they'll have bout 6 by 2020. Rising Dragon! :)
Far more of a threat than the Russian Fleet; or any other credible opponent.
Again, this has nothing to do with Russia. Russia has its own problems.
The Amphibious IFV was designated ZBD-05 when it entered service, and the amphibious light tank was ZTL-05.

As for how many?

I've seen photographs of huge lineups of the damn things in both PLA Marine Corps Blue and PLA Army Amphibious Green/Tan.

The PLA Marine Corps has two brigades. The 1st Brigade is fully equipped with the new Amphibious IFVs; while the 164th Brigade is still equipped with the older bolt-on stuff.

They also launched the second Type 071 LPD back in November. So the PLA Marine Corps' capability is improving.
Huge lineups doesn't mean much Shep.
Considering that the ZBD-05 and ZTL-05 both use hydroplaning hulls and mechanisms that have more in common with the perennially delayed USMC EFV than any Russian vehicle ever built....I'd say it's indigenous.
Sure, some of the design is. That doesn't mean all of it is, nor does it mean its actually any good, you know?
Their tank lineage comes from two sources:

T-54As provided via Russian Military Assistance before the Sino-Soviet Split
T-62 captured in 1969 border conflict with USSR.

They MAY have acquired T-72s in the 1980s from the Iran/Iraq conflict -- give us a captured tank in exchange for our aid to you -- but this is not confirmed or reliable.

Honestly, the existence of a splash guard on early ZTZ-99s before they gained ERA bricks is not definite proof of T-72 clone lineage. If that was the case, then Arjun would be a T-72 clone.

Considering that all prior Chinese MBT development traced it's lineage back to the T-54A and improved versions thereof, and that the ZTZ-99 has so many different design decisions made compared to the T-72 (welded/angular turret vs cast/rounded) among others...it's not a clone.

In fact, the ZTZ-99 could have been a Merkava clone -- apparently some engineers argued for that during the development phase which began in 1984 and continued til 1999.
It really doesn't matter whether one quibbles about whether it qualifies as a "clone" or not. The point is that its a bit pants.
Actually in 2008 the Chinese had about 341 Type 99s in service, and by the summer of 2009 they had 372-465 Type 99s in service. This correlates well with rumors of production being about 100 tanks a year.
Well I'm going from Sino-Defence. Another article I read (linked below) claimed about 350, so I dunno. In any event, its not particularly impressive.
This compares quite nicely to actual T-90 numbers in the Russian Army or India. :mrgreen:
And again, Shep, this has nothing to do with Russia.
Pelranius wrote: I don't suppose you have a source for this?
Yup:-

http://asiandefensenews.blogspot.com/20 ... ssian.html

Sure, you could complain that its TEH RUSSIANS!!! :) rubbishing the Chinese whizz-bang new mega-tank, but I think you need more compelling reasons to actually dismiss detailed criticisms of their tank. I'm sure the rest of the article itself could be nitpicked (however it is primarily historical), though.

(although characterizing MDB & CAST as beholden to the Russian government or slavishly devoted to the propping up of Russian military power is ridiculous for those who have actually read the magazine)
Like Legend of Galactic Heroes? Please contribute to http://gineipaedia.com/
User avatar
Straha
Lord of the Spam
Posts: 8198
Joined: 2002-07-21 11:59pm
Location: NYC

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Straha »

Hey Sheppy-poo, are you going to respond or are you admitting that all your blustering is pointless and ultimately does far more harm than good?
'After 9/11, it was "You're with us or your with the terrorists." Now its "You're with Straha or you support racism."' ' - The Romulan Republic

'You're a bully putting on an air of civility while saying that everything western and/or capitalistic must be bad, and a lot of other posters (loomer, Stas Bush, Gandalf) are also going along with it for their own personal reasons (Stas in particular is looking through rose colored glasses)' - Darth Yan
User avatar
Lonestar
Keeper of the Schwartz
Posts: 13321
Joined: 2003-02-13 03:21pm
Location: The Bay Area

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Lonestar »

Straha wrote:Hey Sheppy-poo, are you going to respond or are you admitting that all your blustering is pointless and ultimately does far more harm than good?

Hi Straha! I didn't know you got made mod. I must have missed the announcement. Congrats.
"The rifle itself has no moral stature, since it has no will of its own. Naturally, it may be used by evil men for evil purposes, but there are more good men than evil, and while the latter cannot be persuaded to the path of righteousness by propaganda, they can certainly be corrected by good men with rifles."
User avatar
Straha
Lord of the Spam
Posts: 8198
Joined: 2002-07-21 11:59pm
Location: NYC

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Straha »

Lonestar wrote:
Straha wrote:Hey Sheppy-poo, are you going to respond or are you admitting that all your blustering is pointless and ultimately does far more harm than good?

Hi Straha! I didn't know you got made mod. I must have missed the announcement. Congrats.
Where the hell am I making a statement that could be read as me acting like a mod?

Did I threaten somebody with administrative action? Nope.
Did I threaten to mod the thread in anyway? No...
Did I accuse someone of breaking Board rules? Nein.
Did I in anyway violate the rules of the board? Doesn't seem so.

Am I flaming someone who made some really racist comments, and is engaging in a form of rhetoric that's more than a little repulsive? Yes, but flaming people who do that happens every day on this board.
Am I insinuating cowardice because he didn't respond when he was willing to type out a mammoth response to someone else? Yeah. That too. Again, go look at any number of threads (including this one) for times when that's not only allowed but praised.

If you really take that as me trying to backseat mod, somehow, I'm sorry. It's certainly not meant in that way, and I think that's rather obvious.
'After 9/11, it was "You're with us or your with the terrorists." Now its "You're with Straha or you support racism."' ' - The Romulan Republic

'You're a bully putting on an air of civility while saying that everything western and/or capitalistic must be bad, and a lot of other posters (loomer, Stas Bush, Gandalf) are also going along with it for their own personal reasons (Stas in particular is looking through rose colored glasses)' - Darth Yan
User avatar
Lonestar
Keeper of the Schwartz
Posts: 13321
Joined: 2003-02-13 03:21pm
Location: The Bay Area

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Lonestar »

Straha wrote:
Hi Straha! I didn't know you got made mod. I must have missed the announcement. Congrats.
Where the hell am I making a statement that could be read as me acting like a mod?

Did I threaten somebody with administrative action? Nope.
Did I threaten to mod the thread in anyway? No...
Did I accuse someone of breaking Board rules? Nein.
Did I in anyway violate the rules of the board? Doesn't seem so.

Am I flaming someone who made some really racist comments, and is engaging in a form of rhetoric that's more than a little repulsive? Yes, but flaming people who do that happens every day on this board.
Am I insinuating cowardice because he didn't respond when he was willing to type out a mammoth response to someone else? Yeah. That too. Again, go look at any number of threads (including this one) for times when that's not only allowed but praised.

If you really take that as me trying to backseat mod, somehow, I'm sorry. It's certainly not meant in that way, and I think that's rather obvious.[/quote]

Oh sorry, I just thought that you were bitching that Shep was intentionally not responding to posts because he hadn't responded for the incredibly long time of 3 hrs.
"The rifle itself has no moral stature, since it has no will of its own. Naturally, it may be used by evil men for evil purposes, but there are more good men than evil, and while the latter cannot be persuaded to the path of righteousness by propaganda, they can certainly be corrected by good men with rifles."
User avatar
mr friendly guy
The Doctor
Posts: 11235
Joined: 2004-12-12 10:55pm
Location: In a 1960s police telephone box somewhere in Australia

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by mr friendly guy »

From my impression of Shep, its obvious he has a uhem, grudge against Muslims and Mexicans. However I can't say the same of China. In fact he strikes me as wanting China to improve not just so that America gets a new "potential enemy" to fund the US budget into bigger debt for more toys. The reason I say this is from a few observations.

a. This thread

b. He talks about how China can provide the energy to increase the standard of living of its citizens even in the face of peak oil. Remember when he suggested using nuclear to substitute coal, and coal to convert to fuel.

c. He talks about how China can provide fertiliser to feed its population in the face of peak oil. The example is to use nuclear plants to produce ammonia using 1960s technology. I can imagine the looks on the Peakists' face when he suggested that.

d. He supports China getting Uyghur detainess from the Gitmo (but then this could fall under his anti-Muslim stance), which is quite interesting because China is estimated to have up to 20 million Muslims by the CIA. In case anyone is wondering, China generally doesn't ask for religion in the census, hence numbers have to be estimated.

e. He supported them over the Tibet riots.

f. Several times when he buys stuff made in China he talks about how it helps some poorer person in China improve their standard of living. I think he mentioned it in regards to buying a kindle. It could be he just wants to spite the Peakists, but then again maybe its more than that.

g. He once had a sig saying something along the lines of China being the last bastion of "true" capitalism or something. I gather he is a fan of capitalism.

h. He argues against environmentalists who bitch about pollution coming from China, with the sarcastic remark about why we don't like poor people trying to improve their standard of living.

Edit - edited for clarity and punctuation.
Last edited by mr friendly guy on 2010-12-29 12:10am, edited 1 time in total.
Never apologise for being a geek, because they won't apologise to you for being an arsehole. John Barrowman - 22 June 2014 Perth Supernova.

Countries I have been to - 14.
Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, Netherlands, Norway, Singapore, Sweden, USA.
Always on the lookout for more nice places to visit.
User avatar
Shroom Man 777
FUCKING DICK-STABBER!
Posts: 21222
Joined: 2003-05-11 08:39am
Location: Bleeding breasts and stabbing dicks since 2003
Contact:

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

Straha I don't think much of your points since they only deal with abstract sociocultural and geopolitical concepts and realities rather than military trivias of weapons systems, their shapes, forms, sizes and numbers, and how they are charted and placed in graphs. The preponderance of these weapons systems, and the nuances of jet engines and thrust pounds per square inches to some, are way more important than unimportant side-issues like sociocultural and geopolitical affairs that really have no bearing on the discussion of inter US-China affairs or anything else whatsoever. :P

We all know that big toys that go boom-boom are what really count anyway, so military weapons systems should be the main thing we should discuss and emphasize to the expense of everything else. After all, if people decide to vote on their own politicians solely because of issues involving military affairs, ballistic missile defense and nuclear power without even bothering to factor social issues, civil rights, health care reform, the environment, the economy, and everything else... then why should we expect them to approach international affairs and deal with them in any other fashion?
Image "DO YOU WORSHIP HOMOSEXUALS?" - Curtis Saxton (source)
shroom is a lovely boy and i wont hear a bad word against him - LUSY-CHAN!
Shit! Man, I didn't think of that! It took Shroom to properly interpret the screams of dying people :D - PeZook
Shroom, I read out the stuff you write about us. You are an endless supply of morale down here. :p - an OWS street medic
Pink Sugar Heart Attack!
User avatar
Straha
Lord of the Spam
Posts: 8198
Joined: 2002-07-21 11:59pm
Location: NYC

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Straha »

Lonestar wrote: Oh sorry, I just thought that you were bitching that Shep was intentionally not responding to posts because he hadn't responded for the incredibly long time of 3 hrs.
A. Where the heck are you getting the 3 hour figure from?

B. I didn't know that bitching at someone somehow meant that I considered myself a mod. I'll keep that in mind for future reference.
'After 9/11, it was "You're with us or your with the terrorists." Now its "You're with Straha or you support racism."' ' - The Romulan Republic

'You're a bully putting on an air of civility while saying that everything western and/or capitalistic must be bad, and a lot of other posters (loomer, Stas Bush, Gandalf) are also going along with it for their own personal reasons (Stas in particular is looking through rose colored glasses)' - Darth Yan
User avatar
Lonestar
Keeper of the Schwartz
Posts: 13321
Joined: 2003-02-13 03:21pm
Location: The Bay Area

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Lonestar »

Straha wrote:A. Where the heck are you getting the 3 hour figure from?

B. I didn't know that bitching at someone somehow meant that I considered myself a mod. I'll keep that in mind for future reference.
As I was, I thought you were referring to the Vympel/Shep byplay.
"The rifle itself has no moral stature, since it has no will of its own. Naturally, it may be used by evil men for evil purposes, but there are more good men than evil, and while the latter cannot be persuaded to the path of righteousness by propaganda, they can certainly be corrected by good men with rifles."
User avatar
Straha
Lord of the Spam
Posts: 8198
Joined: 2002-07-21 11:59pm
Location: NYC

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Straha »

Lonestar wrote:
Straha wrote:A. Where the heck are you getting the 3 hour figure from?

B. I didn't know that bitching at someone somehow meant that I considered myself a mod. I'll keep that in mind for future reference.
As I was, I thought you were referring to the Vympel/Shep byplay.
No worries, I think we've all done something like that at least once. :P
'After 9/11, it was "You're with us or your with the terrorists." Now its "You're with Straha or you support racism."' ' - The Romulan Republic

'You're a bully putting on an air of civility while saying that everything western and/or capitalistic must be bad, and a lot of other posters (loomer, Stas Bush, Gandalf) are also going along with it for their own personal reasons (Stas in particular is looking through rose colored glasses)' - Darth Yan
User avatar
MKSheppard
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Posts: 29842
Joined: 2002-07-06 06:34pm

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by MKSheppard »

Quick post of more J-20/j-14 pictures

Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
Pelranius
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3539
Joined: 2006-10-24 11:35am
Location: Around and about the Beltway

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Pelranius »

Full functional HUD. They really aren't cutting any corners, are they?
Turns out that a five way cross over between It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the Ali G Show, Fargo, Idiocracy and Veep is a lot less funny when you're actually living in it.
User avatar
Vympel
Spetsnaz
Spetsnaz
Posts: 29312
Joined: 2002-07-19 01:08am
Location: Sydney Australia

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Vympel »

Why would the HUD not be fully functional dude? How's he going to fly the plane? :)

That said, I quite like the look of her- I don't know why so many people think she's ugly. The structure of the nose is especially interesting.
Like Legend of Galactic Heroes? Please contribute to http://gineipaedia.com/
Pelranius
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3539
Joined: 2006-10-24 11:35am
Location: Around and about the Beltway

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Pelranius »

Apparently some China military watchers and fanboys were disappointed that it didn't have lambda wings. Guess you can never make some people happy.
Turns out that a five way cross over between It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the Ali G Show, Fargo, Idiocracy and Veep is a lot less funny when you're actually living in it.
User avatar
Lonestar
Keeper of the Schwartz
Posts: 13321
Joined: 2003-02-13 03:21pm
Location: The Bay Area

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Lonestar »

That is one big-ass airplane.
"The rifle itself has no moral stature, since it has no will of its own. Naturally, it may be used by evil men for evil purposes, but there are more good men than evil, and while the latter cannot be persuaded to the path of righteousness by propaganda, they can certainly be corrected by good men with rifles."
User avatar
Sarevok
The Fearless One
Posts: 10681
Joined: 2002-12-24 07:29am
Location: The Covenants last and final line of defense

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Sarevok »

Indeed. It seems the average size of fighters has kept going up and up since WW 2. To the point where we got the big F-22 and the massive PAK-FA in the fifth generation.
I have to tell you something everything I wrote above is a lie.
User avatar
Sarevok
The Fearless One
Posts: 10681
Joined: 2002-12-24 07:29am
Location: The Covenants last and final line of defense

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Sarevok »

Indeed. It seems the average size of fighters has kept going up and up since WW 2. To the point where we got the big F-22 and the massive PAK-FA in the fifth generation.
I have to tell you something everything I wrote above is a lie.
User avatar
MKSheppard
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Posts: 29842
Joined: 2002-07-06 06:34pm

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by MKSheppard »

Lonestar wrote:That is one big-ass airplane.
My own estimates are about 53-68 feet; some Chinese observers put it at 70~ ft.
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
User avatar
MKSheppard
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Posts: 29842
Joined: 2002-07-06 06:34pm

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by MKSheppard »

Vympel wrote:Yes, and? All I'm saying is that Chinese engine technology is still quite young, which casts serious doubts on this weirdly triumphal talk about how awesome the Chinese are all of a sudden.
So what if it's young. The point is they are no longer reliant on Putin's decrees to obtain engines for heavy aircraft, and pretty soon won't be for light aircraft.
If the J-20 isn't going to have a fifth generation engine anytime soon, then its hardly going to be a credible F-22A competitor, right?
Again, you miss my point. You don't need engines that put out 35,000+ lbf wet if you're not engaging in high alpha manouvers.

The F-22 has a T/W of about 1.08 (100% fuel) to 1.26 (50% fuel).

The F-108A Rapier would have had a T/W of 0.57 (100% fuel) to 0.74 (50% fuel).

With the present output of the WS-10A; China will be fine -- the plane will be capable of supercruising, but it will be limited like the F-22 due to both having large frameless canopies.

Cruising at M1.5+ @ 65,000 feet easily lets you munch on delicious delicious F-15s, F-16s, F-18s and whatever else that annoys you; since your AAMs will have a huge boost in range from your speed and altitude; and you will be capable of controlling the engagement with your speed and altitude.

No need to get into pointless energy bleeding high alpha dogfighting that needs large installed thrust to recover lost energy. In other words, no damn Cobras.
There's no guarantee at all the world will be significantly richer in 2020.
Singapore with a GDP of $255 billion was easily able to blow a billion on just twelve F-15SGs. Goldman Sachs in it's famous BRIC report estimated that by 2020 Pakistan would have a GDP of 268 billion, Vietnam 273, the Philippines 289, Iran some 716, and Indonesia some 752.

Now granted the Global financial crisis will have cooled off these predictions quite a bit -- but there will be a market for it.
Again, my intention is not to rubbish China, but to moderate all this weird Rising Dragon talk.
The fact of the matter is that China is becoming increasingly independent of foreign suppliers of technology.
I don't think there's any evidence that they haven't got strategic bombers by conscious choice as opposed to simply not having the technology to build some on their own. Simply look at the H-6.
Oh please.

The Chinese have looked at a heavier capability strategic bombing force in the past -- they proposed the H-8-I, with four WS-6J turbofans or six JT-3D turbofans, or the H-8-II, with six WS-6J turbofans in the 1970s; but they did not get past the paper stage.

It's more than within China's capability today to produce a modern long range bomber.

So where's the programme?

The best we've seen from them on this front are modernized H-6 one-off prototypes with newer engines in factories.

This is a conscious strategic choice to spend their monies elsewhere.
So anyone's supposed to be scared of the J-20 then? Come on man, if this thing's going to be a credible fifth-generation fighter, it needs a proper engine.
Again, see my earlier reply in this post. You only need umpty billion ton thrust engines if you are going to turn and burn like Maverick and Goose in Top Gun bleeding off energy that must be regained through prodigious quantities of thrust.
Again, it won't even fly for the first time until 2014. There's not going to be any tanker variant of the C919 in a few years. 2014 itself is a few years.

That assumes the C919 is actually going to find success as a commercial airliner too, btw.
Considering the whole C919 programme was launched in 2008, six years to first flight is pretty good, considering the problems that Boeing is having with the 787 programme, which launched in 2003 and first flew in 2009; the same timeframe.

Oh, and the C919 is apparently very conservative -- weighing in at 77.3 tonnes -- the same as the 1980s A320 with only six more seats over it. So it certainly is not pushing the bleeding edge of aeronautics the way the 787 was with composites and distributed manufacturing.

And it wouldn't be the first airliner which was a commercial failure but found new life in military contracts -- hello Lockheed Electra, anyone?
Because they might need them?
The PLAAF already have some 17-20 x IL-76s, giving them a minimal long range heavy transport capability, and ten H-6 based tankers.

The question is why should the Chinese enter a new contract with the Russians for heavy transports and tankers of the same model family that the Russians have yet to deliver, despite the contract being signed in 2005 and there being 12 unfinished airframes already at the factory in question?
I'm not saying I know for a fact whether they will or won't get them, but appealing to future aeroplanes that aren't even in service as a reason why not is specious.
Right, because long term planning doesn't exist in Vympel world.
Probably for the same reason that they needed the S-300 when they had the HQ-9?
Actually, none of the reasons that caused them to buy the S-300 as a stopgap system while HQ-9 shook out it's development bugs apply to the S-400.

For one, the S-400 missiles in the complex that work -- the 48N6E3, 9M96E/9M96E2 -- actually offer no real substantiative advantage over the S-300's missiles, other than adding the capability of quad packing in ABM interceptors like PAC-3.

While that is a nice capability, is it justification enough for adding an entirely new weapons system when you just bought S-300PMU2 and the HQ-9 is more than capable of handling ABM?
This isn't a contest with Russia Shep. Russia has absolutely nothing to do with this topic. I'm merely pointing out this Rising Dragon stuff is overstated.
I'm pointing out that China is already a greater, more credible threat than the moribund Russian military.
Great, at this rate they'll have bout 6 by 2020. Rising Dragon! :)
Considering that they built the first of class 052C in about 23 months, the Type 052Cs they laid down this year will commission Fall 2012.

At a rate of two ships every two years; by 2020, they will have twelve 052Cs in commission. This is more than enough to provide the PLA(N)'s carrier with an escort at all times.

I suspect the ultimate force level of 052Cs will depend on what level of protection the PLA(N) considers necessary for a carrier and the number of carriers they plan to have.

The US Navy in the 1980s determined the ultimate force numbers for the Ticonderoga class by determining that each CVBG would have two ships and each SAG would have one ship. At the then-present force level of twelve CVBGs and three SAGs, this led to 27 Ticonderogas required.
Again, this has nothing to do with Russia. Russia has its own problems.
Again, China is already a far more credible threat than moribund Russia, which is now basically Upper Volta maintaining it's seat at the Table Where Big Boys Sit through devious energy deals with Europe and the huge pile of nuclear weapons it has left over from the days of the USSR.
Huge lineups doesn't mean much Shep.
Considering a PLA Marine Brigade is organized around:

1 to 2 Amphibious Armored Battalions (30-40 AFV per Bn)
4 to 5 Amphibious Infantry Battalions (30-40 AFV per Bn)
Misc other units

It's easy to guesstimate how many ZBD-05s and ZTL-05s exist in PLA Marine Hands.

30 to 80 ZTL-05 Amphibious Tanks
120 to 200 ZBD-05 Amphibious IFVs

Harder to estimate the amount that the PLA Army has.

But we do know that the 1st Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division have had the ZTL-05 and ZBD-05 since 2009 when they paraded in it, while the 124th Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division still has the older equipment.

These Amphibious Mech Inf Divisions have two Mech Inf Regiments and one armored regiment. Each regiment commands about four battalions.

So we can roughly guesstimate the amount of ZTL and ZBD-05s that the PLA Army has as being about 360 to 480 vehicles of both types.

These are not small numbers.

Plus of course, the PLA(N) will soon have an excellent LCAC to land the landing force with!

They started the Yuyi LCAC project in 2007 as part of the Type 071 LPD project; and it's already tooling around.

Image
Yuyi trials in 2009

Image
Pre-production unit tooling around in the Gulf of Aden as part of anti piracy ops in 2010

I suppose you'll be calling this one a cheap chinese knockoff of the American LCAC, despite it being 50% longer than the American one.
Sure, some of the design is. That doesn't mean all of it is, nor does it mean its actually any good, you know?
It's clearly good enough for the PLA Marines and Army, who routinely conduct mass manouvers with the vehicles well out to sea.

By the way, it puts China into rare company. Only one other country has built heavy amphibian tracks -- the United States.

Yes; I know about how just about everything the Soviets built except tanks was to be amphibious -- but much of that is a river crossing capability of a few miles at best.
The point is that its a bit pants
Wrong.

This seems to be where Vympel gets most of his information on China's miliary from

The truth is, the armor system of the latest and greatest Chinese tank’s turret looks nothing short of ugly. Due to poor design choices, the thickness of the armor at the 30-35 degrees angle is a mere 350mm, whereas the figure for the latest Soviet/Russian tanks is about 600mm from all angles.

Let's look at some photos.

ZTZ-98 top photo

This is the ZTZ-98. Eighteen of these were first seen in the 1999 parade; and it was the initial production version of the advanced tank. After changes to the engine and a redesigned turret armor array, the modified ZTZ-98Gs were then adopted as the ZTZ-99.

Since we know the width of the ZTZ-99 is 3400mm, we can then estimate the LOS thickness of the frontal turret armor. You can see the outlines of the special armor insertion points.

My estimation is that this basic model has about 520mm of LOS on the frontal turret armor arrays; with the hole for the armor insert being about 170 x 470mm (hard to tell with it's trapezoidal shape).

The ZTZ-99 had a new modular system which was more angular and resembled the Leopard 2A5's turret armor. Here's a photo of one such turret armor module:

Image

Scaling off the earlier figures we got for the special armor insertion ports; I have a LOS of about 755~ mm on the top; and 1400~ mm at the "arrowpoint".

Now; undoubtly my scaling is off and there are gross errors; but you can see that the ZTZ-99 has fairly thick frontal turret armor; certainly far more than the 350mm that your source claims.

It's likely however that most of it is not all armor; but instead similar to the Leopard 2's early armor -- using perforated armor plates placed at various angles to add partial protection against threats and to place greater stress onto long rod sabots to snap them -- at much less weight cost than non-perforated armor.

But that's not all. The most recent model is the ZTZ-99A2.

Image

This is a ZTZ-99A2 turret at the factory. Notice anything? Like the new advanced ERA or NERA blocks on the turret adding even more protection?

Notice how much more advanced they are than the T-90's ERA arrays in that they cover far far more of the tank's surface, leaving less "holes" in the ERA protection?

If we assume that those ERA arrays are about as advanced as Kontact-5, then that means we have an additional 250mm RHA protection versus KE rounds and 600mm RHA more protection versus HEAT rounds.

But let's be super conservative. Let's assume this ChiCom ERA is only 40% as effective as Kontak-5. That still leaves us with 100mm KE/240mm HEAT on top of the base armor.

Even if they're just non explosive reactive armor made out of advanced plastics and rubber; that's still 50-75mm of extra LOS, depending on whether the bricks are 2 or 3 inches thick.

So yeah. The ZTZ-99 is comprehensively protected to at least the level of the T-90A or mid-life Leopard 2, if not greater on the frontal turret arc.

Finally, here's a final question. Given that the cost of the ZTZ-99 is about $2.5 to $3.4 million depending on what source you go to; why would the Chinese be buying hundreds of a tank if it had armor protection only slightly improved over a T-62 with ERA addons?

Roof armor at the front is also weak

Non sequitur. The top armor on the M1 Abrams near the driver's position is pretty weak.

But guess what?

It's at a very sharp angle, almost 70 degrees -- so most everything that hits it is likely to riochet off, or penetrate at such a sharp angle that it has a lot of LOS to go through. Same principle also applies to the roof armor of any turret near the front.

and the tank has inherited the weakness of the porthole and hatch areas from the old Soviet designs.

I'm not even sure what he's trying to get here.

The dimensions of the Type 99 turret make any substantial improvements in its built-in protection system all but impossible - witness the latest modification, Type 99A1.

Actually no.

Image

Since the armor is external to the turret, all you need to do to add more protection frontally is to remove the armor module with a crane -- notice the handy dandy three eyes on the top for lifting -- and place a new module in. The module can be longer to offer more LOS protection if you want.

Side turret armor can also be increased easily -- they've already done this:

Image

Notice the side ERA blocks? There are other angles which suggest that the ERA is placed over the crew's side stowage bins; so that the sleeping bags and other crap the crew has acts as applique armor.

Meanwhile, the decision to use the powerful but bulky German MTU diesel engine forced the Chinese designers to add an extra meter to the tank’s length, bringing its weight to 54 metric tons despite the sacrifices made in armor strength.

That brings up another point. The 1 meter of extra length the hull has over the T-72, along with the 1.500 PS engine mean that there's more than plenty of growth options for add on armor, more powerful whatever, replace the turret with a new one with more protection if the need should arise; and not have to majorly upgrade the suspension and powertrain.

Besides, the use of imported engines - or their assembly from imported components

Actually, the ZTZ-99's engine is a Chinese derivative of the German MTU MB 870 V and built in China.

Image

Wow, that looks like a Germanoid and and I didn't know CCTV-7 was an official Germanoid channel.

Compared to the vast experience of Soviet/Russian tank designers, the Chinese are only making their first steps - and it really shows.

China has long since built it's own MBTs since the Sino Soviet Split; and they've had long experience in building tanks for export, specifically for Pakistan. In fact, a lot of failed contenders for PLA tank programmes end up in Pakistan and given Pakistani names.

Let's also not mention the fact that the ZTZ-99 programme began in 1984 and ran in a developmental phase until first public showing of the ZTZ-98 in 1999.

The initial idea was to produce a tank capable of meeting a Soviet T-80 on equal grounds with a possible overmatch. This...changed after 1991 to face the M1A1 Abrams threat after we had efficiently shredded Iraq.

As a random aside; the Chief Designer for the ZTZ-99 is about 93 and a National Hero of the War of Resistance Against the Japanese Invasion (1937-45).

There are other howlers in the article like the fighting compartment of the new 155mm SPH being a clone of the 2S19, the Smerch Clone, etc etc.

What he leaves out is that China developed FOUR major MRLS systems at the same time -- the Smerch look-alike just happened to win the PHL-05 contract.

There was the WS family, the A-100 family, the AR-1/2 (Smerch look alike) family, and the WM-80 family, which ended up being sold to Armenia.
In any event, its [ZTZ-99 numbers] not particularly impressive.
At a production level of 100 tanks a year or so, by 2020, China would have a modern tank fleet of 1,000 - 1,300 front line tanks. This compares nicely to the 1,200~ M1A2s in the US Army's inventory.

Add in the ZTZ-96s that are also being produced to replace the older T-54 clones en masse and China's tank fleet will be very modern by that date.
And again, Shep, this has nothing to do with Russia.
Again, I'm pointing out that China is already a greater, more credible threat than the moribund Russian military which is Upper Volta with nukes.
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
User avatar
Vympel
Spetsnaz
Spetsnaz
Posts: 29312
Joined: 2002-07-19 01:08am
Location: Sydney Australia

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by Vympel »

MKSheppard wrote: So what if it's young. The point is they are no longer reliant on Putin's decrees to obtain engines for heavy aircraft, and pretty soon won't be for light aircraft.
So they say, but what does the evidence show? They've made baby steps, they don't have, at this stage, the demonstrated depth of experience with whole classes of engine (for all sorts of applications, and that includes helicopters, re: just look at their Z-10) that the United States or Russia has.
Again, you miss my point. You don't need engines that put out 35,000+ lbf wet if you're not engaging in high alpha manouvers.

The F-22 has a T/W of about 1.08 (100% fuel) to 1.26 (50% fuel).

The F-108A Rapier would have had a T/W of 0.57 (100% fuel) to 0.74 (50% fuel).

With the present output of the WS-10A; China will be fine -- the plane will be capable of supercruising, but it will be limited like the F-22 due to both having large frameless canopies.

Cruising at M1.5+ @ 65,000 feet easily lets you munch on delicious delicious F-15s, F-16s, F-18s and whatever else that annoys you; since your AAMs will have a huge boost in range from your speed and altitude; and you will be capable of controlling the engagement with your speed and altitude.

No need to get into pointless energy bleeding high alpha dogfighting that needs large installed thrust to recover lost energy. In other words, no damn Cobras.
And your assertion that this is the design philosophy of the J-20 is based on what evidence?
Singapore with a GDP of $255 billion was easily able to blow a billion on just twelve F-15SGs. Goldman Sachs in it's famous BRIC report estimated that by 2020 Pakistan would have a GDP of 268 billion, Vietnam 273, the Philippines 289, Iran some 716, and Indonesia some 752.

Now granted the Global financial crisis will have cooled off these predictions quite a bit -- but there will be a market for it.
Yes, and how many of those countries do you know will be ponying up money for J-20s even assuming they could afford it? Hence my original problem with this baseless assertion that the appearance of the J-20 somehow renders the PAK FA incapable of export.
The fact of the matter is that China is becoming increasingly independent of foreign suppliers of technology.
So what? That's obviously true. It doesn't mean much at this stage.
Oh please.

The Chinese have looked at a heavier capability strategic bombing force in the past -- they proposed the H-8-I, with four WS-6J turbofans or six JT-3D turbofans, or the H-8-II, with six WS-6J turbofans in the 1970s; but they did not get past the paper stage.
And this somehow refutes what I'm saying?
It's more than within China's capability today to produce a modern long range bomber.
Based on what evidence? Paper projects that went nowhere? Anyone can start a project. There is in fact no evidence whatsoever that China has the capability to build a modern long range strategic bomber. They've never done anything like it.
Considering the whole C919 programme was launched in 2008, six years to first flight is pretty good, considering the problems that Boeing is having with the 787 programme, which launched in 2003 and first flew in 2009; the same timeframe.

Oh, and the C919 is apparently very conservative -- weighing in at 77.3 tonnes -- the same as the 1980s A320 with only six more seats over it. So it certainly is not pushing the bleeding edge of aeronautics the way the 787 was with composites and distributed manufacturing.

And it wouldn't be the first airliner which was a commercial failure but found new life in military contracts -- hello Lockheed Electra, anyone?
Leaving aside that its simply an assumption that conservativeness or not the C919 will actually fly in 2014 and be ready in a reasonable timeframe, the fact remains it does not serve as a credible standing rebuttal to a need to buy transports and tankers from elsewhere.
The PLAAF already have some 17-20 x IL-76s, giving them a minimal long range heavy transport capability, and ten H-6 based tankers.

The question is why should the Chinese enter a new contract with the Russians for heavy transports and tankers of the same model family that the Russians have yet to deliver, despite the contract being signed in 2005 and there being 12 unfinished airframes already at the factory in question?
I don't know, why did they sign a contract in 2005 if they thought their minimal capability was adequate? This is just weird Shep, you've seemingly built up this vision of the Chinese as the Grand Viziers of long-range planning and Machiavellian super intentions based on ... well nothing.
Right, because long term planning doesn't exist in Vympel world.
Oh it exists, it just doesn't automatically invalidate present needs that may not be able to wait.
Actually, none of the reasons that caused them to buy the S-300 as a stopgap system while HQ-9 shook out it's development bugs apply to the S-400.

For one, the S-400 missiles in the complex that work -- the 48N6E3, 9M96E/9M96E2 -- actually offer no real substantiative advantage over the S-300's missiles, other than adding the capability of quad packing in ABM interceptors like PAC-3.

While that is a nice capability, is it justification enough for adding an entirely new weapons system when you just bought S-300PMU2 and the HQ-9 is more than capable of handling ABM?
How do we know the HQ-9 is "more than capable of handling ABM'? Because they did some tests?
I'm pointing out that China is already a greater, more credible threat than the moribund Russian military.
I know that. And I'm telling you it literally has nothing to do with this topic (though the characterization of Russia's military as 'moribund' is ridiculous given procurement in every sector has never been higher, and is only increasing).
Considering that they built the first of class 052C in about 23 months, the Type 052Cs they laid down this year will commission Fall 2012.

At a rate of two ships every two years; by 2020, they will have twelve 052Cs in commission. This is more than enough to provide the PLA(N)'s carrier with an escort at all times.

I suspect the ultimate force level of 052Cs will depend on what level of protection the PLA(N) considers necessary for a carrier and the number of carriers they plan to have.

The US Navy in the 1980s determined the ultimate force numbers for the Ticonderoga class by determining that each CVBG would have two ships and each SAG would have one ship. At the then-present force level of twelve CVBGs and three SAGs, this led to 27 Ticonderogas required.
So yeah, even going with your (optimistic) assumptions, hardly a credible threat to USN naval dominance, now is it?
Again, China is already a far more credible threat than moribund Russia, which is now basically Upper Volta maintaining it's seat at the Table Where Big Boys Sit through devious energy deals with Europe and the huge pile of nuclear weapons it has left over from the days of the USSR.
I know - it still has literally has nothing to do with this topic. (Though as an aside its funny you're calling Russia "Upper Volta with missiles" when that's what it was being called when it was still the USSR in the 1970s and 80s, no? What, this insult only came true now? :))
Considering a PLA Marine Brigade is organized around:

1 to 2 Amphibious Armored Battalions (30-40 AFV per Bn)
4 to 5 Amphibious Infantry Battalions (30-40 AFV per Bn)
Misc other units

It's easy to guesstimate how many ZBD-05s and ZTL-05s exist in PLA Marine Hands.

30 to 80 ZTL-05 Amphibious Tanks
120 to 200 ZBD-05 Amphibious IFVs

Harder to estimate the amount that the PLA Army has.

But we do know that the 1st Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division have had the ZTL-05 and ZBD-05 since 2009 when they paraded in it, while the 124th Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division still has the older equipment.

These Amphibious Mech Inf Divisions have two Mech Inf Regiments and one armored regiment. Each regiment commands about four battalions.

So we can roughly guesstimate the amount of ZTL and ZBD-05s that the PLA Army has as being about 360 to 480 vehicles of both types.

These are not small numbers.

Plus of course, the PLA(N) will soon have an excellent LCAC to land the landing force with!

They started the Yuyi LCAC project in 2007 as part of the Type 071 LPD project; and it's already tooling around.

Image
Yuyi trials in 2009

Image
Pre-production unit tooling around in the Gulf of Aden as part of anti piracy ops in 2010

I suppose you'll be calling this one a cheap chinese knockoff of the American LCAC, despite it being 50% longer than the American one.
Not at all. I have no idea what its capabilities are. Do you? As for your guesstimate, what actual evidence do you have?
It's clearly good enough for the PLA Marines and Army, who routinely conduct mass manouvers with the vehicles well out to sea.
By that logic, every vehicle the PLA has ever used was good enough, since they used them. Kind of self-fulfilling reasoning there Shep :)
Wrong.

Let's look at some photos.

ZTZ-98 top photo

This is the ZTZ-98. Eighteen of these were first seen in the 1999 parade; and it was the initial production version of the advanced tank. After changes to the engine and a redesigned turret armor array, the modified ZTZ-98Gs were then adopted as the ZTZ-99.

Since we know the width of the ZTZ-99 is 3400mm, we can then estimate the LOS thickness of the frontal turret armor. You can see the outlines of the special armor insertion points.

My estimation is that this basic model has about 520mm of LOS on the frontal turret armor arrays; with the hole for the armor insert being about 170 x 470mm (hard to tell with it's trapezoidal shape).

The ZTZ-99 had a new modular system which was more angular and resembled the Leopard 2A5's turret armor. Here's a photo of one such turret armor module:

Scaling off the earlier figures we got for the special armor insertion ports; I have a LOS of about 755~ mm on the top; and 1400~ mm at the "arrowpoint".

Now; undoubtly my scaling is off and there are gross errors; but you can see that the ZTZ-99 has fairly thick frontal turret armor; certainly far more than the 350mm that your source claims.
First of all, why are you assuming the article is referring to the section of armor you're referring to? Its not actually clear, from my reading, which section of the armor its talking about. Furthermore, its one thing to eyeball and assume the armor is that thick, its another thing to actually know it.
It's likely however that most of it is not all armor; but instead similar to the Leopard 2's early armor -- using perforated armor plates placed at various angles to add partial protection against threats and to place greater stress onto long rod sabots to snap them -- at much less weight cost than non-perforated armor.
Speculation.
But that's not all. The most recent model is the ZTZ-99A2.

Image

This is a ZTZ-99A2 turret at the factory. Notice anything? Like the new advanced ERA or NERA blocks on the turret adding even more protection?
What do ERA blocks have to do with the built-in protection? Whilst I'm at it, we know they're "new advanced ERA or NERA blocks" how?
Notice how much more advanced they are than the T-90's ERA arrays in that they cover far far more of the tank's surface, leaving less "holes" in the ERA protection?
You mean early T-90s? Sure (and inexplicably, T-90As with Shotra, but not those without, even though you can easily mount Shtora lights over ERA blocks). None of the latest models (T-90ME & Burlak) have that vulnerability. But we're not talking about ERA.
Finally, here's a final question. Given that the cost of the ZTZ-99 is about $2.5 to $3.4 million depending on what source you go to; why would the Chinese be buying hundreds of a tank if it had armor protection only slightly improved over a T-62 with ERA addons?
Well they're ... not. Unless you take their buying "hundreds" over a sufficiently long period of time. Production of the cheaper Type 96 exceeds the ZTZ-99, does it not?
The dimensions of the Type 99 turret make any substantial improvements in its built-in protection system all but impossible - witness the latest modification, Type 99A1.

Actually no.

Image

Since the armor is external to the turret, all you need to do to add more protection frontally is to remove the armor module with a crane -- notice the handy dandy three eyes on the top for lifting -- and place a new module in. The module can be longer to offer more LOS protection if you want.

Side turret armor can also be increased easily -- they've already done this:

Image

Notice the side ERA blocks? There are other angles which suggest that the ERA is placed over the crew's side stowage bins; so that the sleeping bags and other crap the crew has acts as applique armor.
ERA blocks ! = built-in armor protection Shep. And lets note they're still using the classic Russian autoloader scheme, aren't they, and don't have an armored turret bustle.
Meanwhile, the decision to use the powerful but bulky German MTU diesel engine forced the Chinese designers to add an extra meter to the tank’s length, bringing its weight to 54 metric tons despite the sacrifices made in armor strength.

That brings up another point. The 1 meter of extra length the hull has over the T-72, along with the 1.500 PS engine mean that there's more than plenty of growth options for add on armor, more powerful whatever, replace the turret with a new one with more protection if the need should arise; and not have to majorly upgrade the suspension and powertrain.
Not if the 1m of extra hull length goes towards simply accommodating the engine.
Besides, the use of imported engines - or their assembly from imported components

Actually, the ZTZ-99's engine is a Chinese derivative of the German MTU MB 870 V and built in China.

Image

Wow, that looks like a Germanoid and and I didn't know CCTV-7 was an official Germanoid channel.
Just because you see some Chinese guy on the screen next to some parts doesn't mean they're building the entire engine from scratch, hence the "assembly from imported components" line.
Compared to the vast experience of Soviet/Russian tank designers, the Chinese are only making their first steps - and it really shows.

China has long since built it's own MBTs since the Sino Soviet Split; and they've had long experience in building tanks for export, specifically for Pakistan. In fact, a lot of failed contenders for PLA tank programmes end up in Pakistan and given Pakistani names.

Let's also not mention the fact that the ZTZ-99 programme began in 1984 and ran in a developmental phase until first public showing of the ZTZ-98 in 1999.

The initial idea was to produce a tank capable of meeting a Soviet T-80 on equal grounds with a possible overmatch. This...changed after 1991 to face the M1A1 Abrams threat after we had efficiently shredded Iraq.

As a random aside; the Chief Designer for the ZTZ-99 is about 93 and a National Hero of the War of Resistance Against the Japanese Invasion (1937-45).
Yeah, China's built its own MBTs, we know that. They've also been totally unremarkable pieces of shit for much of that time.
There are other howlers in the article like the fighting compartment of the new 155mm SPH being a clone of the 2S19, the Smerch Clone, etc etc.
Do you know for a fact otherwise?
What he leaves out is that China developed FOUR major MRLS systems at the same time -- the Smerch look-alike just happened to win the PHL-05 contract.
Well that's curious :)
At a production level of 100 tanks a year or so, by 2020, China would have a modern tank fleet of 1,000 - 1,300 front line tanks. This compares nicely to the 1,200~ M1A2s in the US Army's inventory.
Except of course the US doesn't just have M1A2s in its inventory.

Again, I'm pointing out that China is already a greater, more credible threat than the moribund Russian military which is Upper Volta with nukes.
And again, I'm telling you that claim has nothing to do with this thread :) To expand, saying that China is a "greater more credible threat" than Russia is like saying Zanzibar is a greater, more credible threat than ... Togo.
Like Legend of Galactic Heroes? Please contribute to http://gineipaedia.com/
User avatar
MKSheppard
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Ruthless Genocidal Warmonger
Posts: 29842
Joined: 2002-07-06 06:34pm

Re: WaPo hit piece on China

Post by MKSheppard »

Bakustra wrote:That's a lot of words to say "I don't understand what dehumanization means, and also I hate Muslims".
Thank you my good sir!
Doing the same thing to Muslims has been less prominent, since the public and the propagandists are both more sophisticated, but even in Back to the Future and Transformers in the '80s you had stuff about Libya, and the same general attitude that Muslims are violent, stupid, heathens is still there, though now at least government officials are less interested in agitprop and so it's not quite as prevalent.
Gee, I wonder why stuff from the 1980s had Libya as full of crazies? Gee, could it be all the smack Libya was doing with us and the whole LINE OF DEAAAAAAAAATH and Ronald Von Reagan crossing their line of death and killing their planez?

As for the Muslims are violent and stupid heathen attitude -- that actually started to really take off with the 1970s and the whole first general round of Arab terrorism which was generally aimed at hyjacking aircraft and flying them to random locations -- it continued into the 1980s with the whole Achille Lauro incident where RONALD VON REAGAN used F-14 TOMCATS against TERRORISTS among others.

GOOSE. NO! GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOSE! :mrgreen:
"If scientists and inventors who develop disease cures and useful technologies don't get lifetime royalties, I'd like to know what fucking rationale you have for some guy getting lifetime royalties for writing an episode of Full House." - Mike Wong

"The present air situation in the Pacific is entirely the result of fighting a fifth rate air power." - U.S. Navy Memo - 24 July 1944
Post Reply