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Fifth-generation fighter to be developed in joint project

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  • Fifth-generation fighter to be developed in joint project

    Fifth-generation fighter to be developed in joint project

    20:26 | 21/ 04/ 2009

    MOSCOW. (Ilya Kramnik, RIA Novosti military commentator) - The
    development of the fifth-generation jet fighter is one of the most
    widely discussed issues in Russia's military.
    What's more, with its potential involvement in developing the jet
    fighter, India, one of Russia's long-standing partners in military
    technical cooperation, confirms its interest in Russia's future
    project.
    The new jet fighter is being developed under the PAK FA (Prospective
    (promising) Aircraft System of the Frontline Aviation) program to
    replace fourth-generation models now in service in Russian and Indian
    air forces.
    The Soviet Union launched fifth-generation fighter programs in the
    1980s. By the mid-1990s, the Mikoyan Design Bureau developed the
    Project 1.44 warplane, also known as the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG MFI. The
    Sukhoi Design Bureau came up with the S-37 Berkut experimental
    supersonic forward swept-wing jet fighter. The S-37 aircraft was an
    advanced technology demonstration prototype not intended to be
    mass-produced as a fighter. However, due to the lack of funding, the
    Project 1.44 aircraft was not streamlined and never entered production
    either.
    By the late 1990s, it became apparent that existing fifth-generation
    fighter projects were becoming obsolete, that their production
    versions would be inferior to the brand new American F-22 Raptor air
    superiority fighter, and that even if finalized the air force would
    receive such warplanes a decade too late.
    As a result, in the early 2000s, the Russian Government made decision
    to develop an entirely new fifth-generation fighter. The Sukhoi,
    Mikoyan and Yakovlev Design Bureaus, all renowned for their fighters,
    offered several warplane versions.
    The project was eventually entrusted to Sukhoi, which refers to it
    internally as the T-50.
    Various maiden flight and supply deadlines were discussed from the
    very beginning. The T-50 was eventually scheduled to perform its first
    flight somewhere between 2008, the commander of the Russian air force
    announced that the plane would first take off in August 2009.
    Mikhail Pogosyan, head of the Sukhoi Design Bureau, confirmed the
    information. "The progress that has been made by now suggests that we
    can begin the flight tests within one year," Mr Pogosyan said. Several
    versions of the aircraft are being discussed, including a two-seater
    model, and a carrier-based aircraft.
    In the summer of 2008, officials said the T-50 design had been
    approved and prototype aircraft blueprints sent to the
    Komsomolsk-on-Amur aircraft-building plant (KNAAPO) in Russia's Far
    East, where jet fighters will be produced. The plant is currently
    building three prototype T-50 fighters for future tests, due to last
    five to six years, while mass production will not get underway before
    2015.
    Although T-50 specifications have not been disclosed, it is known that
    prototypes and the first production aircraft will be fitted with 117S
    (upgraded AL-31) turbofan engines from Russian aircraft engine
    manufacturer Saturn. As a result, the T-50 will be a heavy fighter
    with a takeoff weight of over 30 metric tons and will have the same
    dimensions as the well-known Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker. The Tikhomirov
    Institute of Instrument Design, which had developed the Irbis radar
    for the Su-35BM Flanker, is now working on the T-50 radar. The new
    fighter's radar and fire-control system will be designs on the basis
    of the Su-35BM's systems.
    India is reportedly more interested in the two-seater version, while
    Russia, with its developed ground and air fight control system, plans
    to concentrate on the one-seater fighter. There is a possibility that
    the Indian version of the Russian fighter will be lighter and smaller,
    and thus cheaper.
    There have been reports in the past few months about the new fighter's
    exterior design. Judging by photographs of the prototype available
    online, the T-50 will resemble the American F-22, a fact easily
    explained by similar parameters on their technical
    specifications. However, it is yet undecided as a prototype.
    As of now, one can only make general conclusions on what kind of a
    machine it will be, based on the known parameters of their technical
    specifications. The new fighter should be:
    - multifunctional - capable of successfully hitting air, ground and
    water targets alike, including small and moving ones, in any weather
    or time of the day, against an enemy equipped with high-precision
    weapons;
    - super-maneuverable - capable of performing controlled flight at low
    velocity and large angle of attack;
    - largely undetectable by optical, infrared or radio radars; and
    - capable of taking off and landing on short runways.
    However, the term "fifth-generation" covers more than just the
    fighters. It also embodies a whole range of equipment to ensure
    advanced combat capabilities, including weapons, radio-electronic
    equipment, ground- and air-based supply and control systems.
    These elements are also under development, although not all projects
    are proceeding with equal speed and success. Nevertheless, they are
    all crucial to the program as a whole. Without them, the new fighter
    will remain a very expensive toy incapable of boosting the combat
    capabilities of the air force.
    The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not
    necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.
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