PAK-FA / Sukhoi Su-57 - Updates and Discussions

The AL-51F, being a three-bypass engine, belongs to the 5.5-generation, whereas the 177 is only 5th-generation.

Engines that have actually reached the 5th-generation level:
177, XF9-1, and F119.
4.5-generation:
R79, WS-15, AL-41F, 117, 177S, EJ200, and F135
Isn't the AL51, F119, F135, EJ200, M88, F414 here all 3 stage engines? Can you elaborate on why some of these are 4.5, 5 and 5.5 gen engines here?
 
The free market is the tool used by the bourgeoisie to smash state protectionism, and Communist theory operates under the exact same logic. The only difference is that capitalism preaches "freedom," while communism preaches "fairness" — I am absolutely certain you understand this.

If the manipulation of the market is to be considered an advantage, it must exist under a single prerequisite: "Whose market is it, and whose enterprises are they?" If the market truly belonged to the state and the enterprises truly belonged to the entire populace, then seeking the welfare of the people would naturally be the sacred duty of the government. But China is not like this.

I do not know what India is like, but China is a country under total oligarchic control. According to actual feedback from banking data, $2.8\%$ of the population controls over $80\%$ of the social wealth. (This was revealed in an annual report accidentally leaked by China Merchants Bank, one of China’s big five banks, which caused a massive uproar at the time.) This is precisely why what you said about the base of capitalism makes sense.

The 80/20 Rule of Capitalism: 20% of the people possess 80% of the wealth.(X)
The 80/20 Rule of Chinese Characteristics: 2% of the people possess 80% of the wealth.(√)

Though I haven’t studied it specifically, I’ve heard that India's zaibatsus (oligarchs) are not far behind, but I won’t expand on that here. Consider Xu Jiayin (许家印) alone—he single-handedly racked up $2.4\text{ trillion RMB}$ in debt. Compared to the wealthy tycoons of China, the vast majority of capitalists in Asia look as impoverished as begging dogs.

Regarding the next issue you mentioned:
The lives of Chinese people are highly politicized, starting from their elementary school education. However, this politicization is designed to teach you to hate the Japanese. (Because the Americans have a bigger fist and there is business to be conducted with them, they don’t dare openly propagate hatred toward Americans; instead, they can only propagate hatred toward the dog raised by the Americans.) Furthermore, it teaches you absolute obedience.

In reality, it is China and India that are truly joined by flesh and blood. Although the formal caste system did not directly transfer to China, the methodology of being a perfect slave was continually propagated in China via Buddhism as the absolute mainstream ideology for over 1,300 years. Anyone who dared to show even a hint of resistance failed to pass down their genes—they were slaughtered long ago.

Thus, while the Chinese people appear extremely politicized, demanding the bombing of Japan and Taiwan on a daily basis, the reality is that they only care about whatever emotion their leaders instruct them to express. Even if they declared someone a permanent arch-nemesis last night, the moment an order comes from above, they will immediately run to the front of that arch-nemesis to cheer and wag their tails. For instance, during a major military parade last year, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto was seated right next to Vladimir Putin. This is a man who commanded military forces to massacre countless ethnic Chinese in the 1990s, yet today he is treated as an honored guest. Survival is what matters most; not stepping out of line is what matters most. Politicization is merely a facade.

Regarding the next issue of birth rates: a brief glance at history makes everything clear. For the vast majority of the past 3,000 years, China was ruled by alien races—specifically the nomadic Mongols from the north. This is the definitive conclusion of recent genomic and anthropological sciences. Aside from the Han, Song, and Ming dynasties where the Han people constituted the ruling class (and there is still no academic consensus on the ethnic origins of the Tang dynasty), China was ruled in all other eras by Mongols and Tungusic peoples.

That China can even present its current facade today is entirely, thoroughly, and completely a blessing bestowed by the decisions of the Communist International in the 1920s—specifically by Leon Trotsky himself—and subsequently by Joseph Stalin and Nikita Khrushchev. Trotsky simultaneously created the Kuomintang (KMT) in Taiwan and the Communist Party (CPC) on the mainland, utilizing Soviet military aid to forcibly unify China's core regions.

Stalin’s military completely eradicated Japanese and American influence, dissolved Manchukuo, and unconditionally handed over more than half of China’s current territory to China—lands that historically belonged to other nations and ethnic groups. Furthermore, the Soviets provided the 156 National Economic Industrial Projects. This represents the greatest, most monumental transfer of technology and societal restructuring in human history. Prior to this, China was merely a semi-feudal, semi-slave society; it leaped overnight into a primary industrial state. Even modern family ethics and domestic morals were imported from the Stalinist era. Khrushchev’s contributions to China were equally monumental; he gave an immense, staggering amount.

If one were to compare the Soviet Union's contribution to China with Britain's contribution to India, the Soviet Union's would be a 100, while Britain's would be a 0.5—or even a negative number. Why say a negative number? Because if it were in the hands of the Soviet Union, they would never have allowed China to be partitioned into two or several different countries


However, the core issue lies in the fact that the Bolshevik transformation of China was imposed from the outside inward. It was not something generated naturally from within Chinese society, nor did Chinese society possess the internal capacity to achieve it. Things given away for free are ultimately never cherished, and everything will inevitably regress to its original baseline. We are simply witnessing the realization of this regressive process right now. When I was younger, I would feel indignant; I hated the traitors, the corrupt officials, and the ignorant, numb, and indifferent populace. Now I understand—this is simply the historical norm.

In fact, whether it was the destruction of the Soviet Union or the destruction of the Chinese Revolution, Trotsky had already precisely prophesied it all. What we are witnessing now is simply the realization of his predictions

The glorious histories written in textbooks were nothing but fabrications engineered a century ago to overthrow Manchu rule. This includes the narrative of the "Four Great Ancient Civilizations"—I don't know if you have heard of it, but it has been systematically propagandized in China for a hundred years, claiming that the world only had four ancient civilizations: Egypt, Babylon, India, and China, and that all other nations were later barbarians. The myth goes that while the other three civilizations were interrupted, only China’s survived continuously. The truth is, without the Bolsheviks, China wouldn't amount to a damn thing. By 1949, the average life expectancy was 35 years—practically identical to a wild chimpanzee.
n fact, this group of people has been in North America for 200 years now, yet they are still hunkered down in those slums called 'Chinatowns,' specializing in scamming Chinese international students. Their standing in the United States is even lower than that of Black Americans

The Chinese populace possesses two defining traits:

The first is acting as "Scabs" (工贼 - labor traitors). They cheapen their own labor to undermine the interests of others, solely to secure momentary praise from their masters. This is the absolute essence of the so-called "World's Factory." Through their own profound suffering, the Chinese populace has made life increasingly miserable for workers and the lower classes worldwide, all to amass staggering wealth for capitalists.

The second trait is acting as "Pariahs/Submissive Subjects" (贱民). Following Mao Zedong's passing in 1976, aristocratic capitalists took power and initiated a comprehensive oligarchic restructuring. By the mid-1980s, they began a massive purge of old-guard officials and party members to "replace them with obedient ones." Millions of military officers and party members quietly packed up and went back to their villages to farm without a single soul daring to resist. By 1998, they pushed further into total privatization, mandating the bankruptcy and restructuring of $80\%$ of state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Even if an SOE was highly profitable, it was forced into bankruptcy so it could be liquidated and sold to officials or the factory director’s relatives. Sixty million industrial workers were "laid off" (下岗), and not a single person dared to revolt. Today, $95\%$ of the capitalists currently on stage—whether they manufacture automobiles or sell hotpot seasonings—are the very cronies and elites who grew rich during that specific wave of plundering. Such absolute compliance would be completely unimaginable in any other country on Earth.

They would rather literally starve to death inside their own homes than cease being submissive subjects. Under such conditions, a catastrophic collapse in the birth rate is a mathematical certainty.

Finally, regarding Telegram: I used to have an account. However, ever since Telegram's founder—that foolish Russian oligarch and turncoat—fled to France to kiss Western boots, only to get slammed by the iron fist of their legal system, he abandoned his so-called neutrality. Consequently, since earlier this year, accounts registered with Chinese (+86) and Taiwanese (+886) country codes can no longer log into the platform at all.
this was really informative, thank you.
 
Isn't the AL51, F119, F135, EJ200, M88, F414 here all 3 stage engines? Can you elaborate on why some of these are 4.5, 5 and 5.5 gen engines here?
This is my own conceptual projection, extrapolated from existing expert and manufacturer classification methodologies.

The 'next-generation engine' is defined by variable cycle technology. While the AL-51F features a three-bypass architecture, its third bypass is fixed and non-adjustable, making it only half a true 'variable bypass ratio' engine; hence, I classify it as a 5.5-generation powerplant.

The benchmark for the 5th generation is typified by the F119. I group the XF9-1 and the Type 177 (WS-15) alongside it since their performance closely matches it, with both delivering an intermediate thrust of 11 tons. As for the remaining cluster of engines, none can hit the benchmark set by the F119, so I downgraded them by half a tier, placing them into the 4.5 generation.

R79, WS-15, AL-41F, 117, 177S, EJ200, and F135

The EJ200 made the cut due to its 3511 aerodynamic configuration—an indisputably advanced design. However, constrained by its low absolute performance metrics, it can only be relegated to the 4.5 generation. Meanwhile,

the M88 and F414 lag far behind the EJ200; in fact, they even fall significantly short of the RD-33MK. I couldn't find the exact thrust curves for the F414, M88-4, and RD-33MK here,
but the curves of their baseline predecessors—the RD-33, F404, and M88-2—are illustrated in the diagram, which is more than sufficient to demonstrate the varying degrees of their upgrade potential.
cc14a9014c086e06d4cc949247087bf40bd1cb11.jpg
 
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The benchmark for the 5th generation is typified by the F119. I group the XF9-1 and the Type 177 (WS-15) alongside it since their performance closely
↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑
There was a strange pasting error in my last post



This is my own conceptual projection, extrapolated from existing expert and manufacturer classification methodologies.

The 'next-generation engine' is defined by variable cycle technology. While the AL-51F features a three-bypass architecture, its third bypass is fixed and non-adjustable, making it only half a true 'variable bypass ratio' engine; hence, I classify it as a 5.5-generation powerplant.

The benchmark for the 5th generation is typified by the F119. I group the XF9-1 and the 177 alongside it since their performance closely matches it, with both delivering an intermediate thrust of 11 tons. As for the remaining cluster of engines, none can hit the benchmark set by the F119, so I downgraded them by half a tier, placing them into the 4.5 generation.

R-79/179, WS-15, AL-41F, 117,117S, 177S, EJ-200, and F135

-----The F135's certified sea-level dynamic thrust reaches 20 tons—which gives it a higher nominal thrust-to-weight ratio—it is, in essence, merely a derivative of the F119 core with an enlarged bypass ratio. Consequently, it lacks the high-speed and high-altitude performance that is absolutely critical for an air-superiority fighter, which is why I have downgraded it by half a tier as well.
In reality, the F135 belongs to the exact same design archetype as the Yak-141's R-79/179 engines; Especially,the F135 inherited its vertical takeoff nozzle design
-----while China's WS-15 inherited its core engine technologies. Therefore, placing all of them into the 4.5 generation is entirely appropriate
-----The EJ200 made the cut due to its 3511 aerodynamic configuration—an indisputably advanced design. However, constrained by its low absolute performance metrics, it can only be relegated to the 4.5 generation.

Meanwhile, the M88 and F414 lag far behind the EJ200; in fact, they even fall significantly short of the RD-33MK. I couldn't find the exact thrust curves for the F414, M88-4, and RD-33MK here, but the curves of their baseline predecessors—the RD-33, F404, and M88-2—are illustrated in the diagram, which is more than sufficient to demonstrate the varying degrees of their upgrade potential.
cc14a9014c086e06d4cc949247087bf40bd1cb11.jpg
 
the M88 and F414 lag far behind the EJ200; in fact, they even fall significantly short of the RD-33MK. I couldn't find the exact thrust curves for the F414, M88-4, and RD-33MK here,

Yes, M88 and GE414 are not for stealth application. AMCA with GE414 is just a stop gap until they get an actual stealth grade engine, to some extent it does the work against the Chinese but then there are many vulnerabilities.
 

Putin Offers Su-57 Fighter To Delhi As India Searches Its 5th-Gen Jet​


Moscow:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has renewed his offer regarding working jointly on manufacturing the fifth-generation Sukhoi Su-57 fighter jet, which comes with enhanced stealth capabilities. In a wide-ranging interaction with global news agencies, Putin also said Russia was ready to provide India with critical technologies for major defence platforms and weapons.

The Russian leader's offer comes at a time when India is looking to add fifth-generation fighter jets to its arsenal amid concerns of regional neighbours advancing their aerial capabilities. India's own project to develop an indigenous 5th-generation jet (Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft) is also under development, but it is likely to enter service only in the mid-2030s.


"At one point, we proposed to our Indian friends to work together on this technology. But back then, our Indian friends said, 'Go ahead on your own, and then we will see -- maybe we'll join," Putin said.

"The aircraft could have been our joint project. We built it independently, but we are ready to work with India in this field," he added.

 
↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑↑
There was a strange pasting error in my last post



This is my own conceptual projection, extrapolated from existing expert and manufacturer classification methodologies.

The 'next-generation engine' is defined by variable cycle technology. While the AL-51F features a three-bypass architecture, its third bypass is fixed and non-adjustable, making it only half a true 'variable bypass ratio' engine; hence, I classify it as a 5.5-generation powerplant.

The benchmark for the 5th generation is typified by the F119. I group the XF9-1 and the 177 alongside it since their performance closely matches it, with both delivering an intermediate thrust of 11 tons. As for the remaining cluster of engines, none can hit the benchmark set by the F119, so I downgraded them by half a tier, placing them into the 4.5 generation.

R-79/179, WS-15, AL-41F, 117,117S, 177S, EJ-200, and F135

-----The F135's certified sea-level dynamic thrust reaches 20 tons—which gives it a higher nominal thrust-to-weight ratio—it is, in essence, merely a derivative of the F119 core with an enlarged bypass ratio. Consequently, it lacks the high-speed and high-altitude performance that is absolutely critical for an air-superiority fighter, which is why I have downgraded it by half a tier as well.
In reality, the F135 belongs to the exact same design archetype as the Yak-141's R-79/179 engines; Especially,the F135 inherited its vertical takeoff nozzle design
-----while China's WS-15 inherited its core engine technologies. Therefore, placing all of them into the 4.5 generation is entirely appropriate
-----The EJ200 made the cut due to its 3511 aerodynamic configuration—an indisputably advanced design. However, constrained by its low absolute performance metrics, it can only be relegated to the 4.5 generation.

Meanwhile, the M88 and F414 lag far behind the EJ200; in fact, they even fall significantly short of the RD-33MK. I couldn't find the exact thrust curves for the F414, M88-4, and RD-33MK here, but the curves of their baseline predecessors—the RD-33, F404, and M88-2—are illustrated in the diagram, which is more than sufficient to demonstrate the varying degrees of their upgrade potential.
View attachment 52035

The M88-2 and F404 thrust curves you have posted are outdated. They belong to 4th gen.

The performance curves are not public for F414-GE-400 and M88-4E.
 

Putin Offers Su-57 Fighter To Delhi As India Searches Its 5th-Gen Jet​


Moscow:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has renewed his offer regarding working jointly on manufacturing the fifth-generation Sukhoi Su-57 fighter jet, which comes with enhanced stealth capabilities. In a wide-ranging interaction with global news agencies, Putin also said Russia was ready to provide India with critical technologies for major defence platforms and weapons.

The Russian leader's offer comes at a time when India is looking to add fifth-generation fighter jets to its arsenal amid concerns of regional neighbours advancing their aerial capabilities. India's own project to develop an indigenous 5th-generation jet (Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft) is also under development, but it is likely to enter service only in the mid-2030s.


"At one point, we proposed to our Indian friends to work together on this technology. But back then, our Indian friends said, 'Go ahead on your own, and then we will see -- maybe we'll join," Putin said.

"The aircraft could have been our joint project. We built it independently, but we are ready to work with India in this field," he added.

From what I've observed across a Russian defence forum, a significant portion of the Russian online community who may or may not be Russians appears far less forgiving of India's recent decisions than the Russian government itself. I'll share some screenshots for those interested, though I should warn that some of the comments are quite hostile and occasionally racist, so those who would rather avoid that content may wish to skip them.

Looking at the matter objectively, I can understand some of the concerns being raised. Every nation is ultimately expected to pursue its own interests, and India is no exception. That said, Russia has been a long-standing and strategically important partner that has contributed substantially to India's defence and technological development over the decades. While safeguarding our national interests must remain the priority, I believe there is also value in managing this relationship with greater sensitivity and diplomatic finesse, especially given the historical depth and significance of the partnership.
 

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That said, I think it's worth remembering that not all of these opinions are necessarily well informed. Some of the criticism is fair, but some of it also seems to come from frustration, pride, or simply not having the full picture of India's situation and requirements. I came across quite a few comments that felt more emotional than objective, with people making very confident claims about India, its military, or its future without much evidence to back them up. That's not unique to Russian forums either, you'll find the same thing on Indian, American, Chinese, or any other defence forum. So while these posts are interesting to read and give an idea of how some Russians feel, I wouldn't take every opinion there as an accurate reflection of reality.
 
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From what I've observed across a Russian defence forum, a significant portion of the Russian online community who may or may not be Russians appears far less forgiving of India's recent decisions than the Russian government itself. I'll share some screenshots for those interested, though I should warn that some of the comments are quite hostile and occasionally racist, so those who would rather avoid that content may wish to skip them.

Looking at the matter objectively, I can understand some of the concerns being raised. Every nation is ultimately expected to pursue its own interests, and India is no exception. That said, Russia has been a long-standing and strategically important partner that has contributed substantially to India's defence and technological development over the decades. While safeguarding our national interests must remain the priority, I believe there is also value in managing this relationship with greater sensitivity and diplomatic finesse, especially given the historical depth and significance of the partnership.
LMAO neither the opinion of the Russians nor Indians on forums matter in anyway. The MoD of the respective countries will do what they want, if they want it they will put up with it. As for radars and what not we dont even have ANY official talk apart from defence rags lmao. They are also right about Indian avionics in the sense that we dont even have the uttam fully certified right now. Why talk about others replacing the N036 at the moment?

Im sorry to the russians but your economy is shit and has barely any future. Your not really going to grow beyond a certain point and your relations have also been ruined by your own hands. Which markets do the russians really have left that wont be poached by China? cant think of too many.
 
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From what I've observed across a Russian defence forum, a significant portion of the Russian online community who may or may not be Russians appears far less forgiving of India's recent decisions than the Russian government itself. I'll share some screenshots for those interested, though I should warn that some of the comments are quite hostile and occasionally racist, so those who would rather avoid that content may wish to skip them.

Looking at the matter objectively, I can understand some of the concerns being raised. Every nation is ultimately expected to pursue its own interests, and India is no exception. That said, Russia has been a long-standing and strategically important partner that has contributed substantially to India's defence and technological development over the decades. While safeguarding our national interests must remain the priority, I believe there is also value in managing this relationship with greater sensitivity and diplomatic finesse, especially given the historical depth and significance of the partnership.
So you want to evaluate a fighter "objectively" based on russian racists behavior against indians on a forum?
 
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The M88-2 and F404 thrust curves you have posted are outdated. They belong to 4th gen.

The performance curves are not public for F414-GE-400 and M88-4E.
The initial architecture of a gas turbine's core engine dictates its absolute performance ceiling. This isn't a question of being obsolete or up-to-date; it is a fundamental trait encoded into its DNA from the very beginning. From that point onward, no matter how much you optimize the design or swap in advanced materials, any performance gains will inherently be limited
From what I've observed across a Russian defence forum, a significant portion of the Russian online community who may or may not be Russians appears far less forgiving of India's recent decisions than the Russian government itself. I'll share some screenshots for those interested, though I should warn that some of the comments are quite hostile and occasionally racist, so those who would rather avoid that content may wish to skip them.

Looking at the matter objectively, I can understand some of the concerns being raised. Every nation is ultimately expected to pursue its own interests, and India is no exception. That said, Russia has been a long-standing and strategically important partner that has contributed substantially to India's defence and technological development over the decades. While safeguarding our national interests must remain the priority, I believe there is also value in managing this relationship with greater sensitivity and diplomatic finesse, especially given the historical depth and significance of the partnership.
Are there any Russian forums you would recommend? I'd like to go check them out. Translation software is pretty convenient nowadays. I'm looking for platforms with a large user base and fast post updates
 
Im sorry to the russians but your economy is shit and has barely any future. Your not really going to grow beyond a certain point and your relations have also been ruined by your own hands. Which markets do the russians really have left that wont be poached by China? cant think of too many.
Chinese-made hardware cannot even reach the baseline standards of Russian military gear. Even though they look sleek on the outside—like some state-of-the-art video game models—they lag far behind starting from the most fundamental level of firearms manufacturing.
Take a weapon as straightforward as the SVD: although China reverse-engineered it into the Type 85 and various other messy iterations later on, not a single one has ever matched the original SVD in terms of critical durability, reliability, and precision. The exact same story applies to the AK-74M as well。And on top of that, their prices are generally more than double
 
So you want to evaluate a fighter "objectively" based on russian racists behavior against indians on a forum?
The fact that your response is about fighter evaluations when the post was about public sentiment and bilateral relations is a pretty good example of why discussions keep talking past each other
 
The fact that your response is about fighter evaluations when the post was about public sentiment and bilateral relations is a pretty good example of why discussions keep talking past each other
You posted about some russian forum posts and you think the entire discussion is about public sentiment? Interesting.
 
You posted about some russian forum posts and you think the entire discussion is about public sentiment? Interesting.
Interesting. I explicitly said "a significant portion of the Russian online community on that forum" and somehow you've translated that into "the entire discussion" and "all public sentiment." At this point you're arguing with a much broader claim than the one I actually made.
Are there any Russian forums you would recommend? I'd like to go check them out. Translation software is pretty convenient nowadays. I'm looking for platforms with a large user base and fast post updates
the user base didn't seem very big and they aren't allowing new users to join for over a year since I skimmed over some of their topics.
 
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The initial architecture of a gas turbine's core engine dictates its absolute performance ceiling. This isn't a question of being obsolete or up-to-date; it is a fundamental trait encoded into its DNA from the very beginning. From that point onward, no matter how much you optimize the design or swap in advanced materials, any performance gains will inherently be limited

Both M88-4E and F414 come with redesigned cores.

F414 has a new fan, new compressor design with blisk, and FADEC compared to F404, not just new materials.

M88-4E also comes with a new compressor stage and advanced cooling compared to 2.
 
Interesting. I explicitly said "a significant portion of the Russian online community on that forum" and somehow you've translated that into "the entire discussion" and "all public sentiment." At this point you're arguing with a much broader claim than the one I actually made.
In this forum discussion, you brought it up and saying thats the topic here.

No one in either the government or the air force cares about what these racist armchair warriors think.
 
In this forum discussion, you brought it up and saying thats the topic here.

No one in either the government or the air force cares about what these racist armchair warriors think.
Nope, you seem to have trouble understanding, in a post about India Russia relations regarding Su 57 where the Government of both have relatively warm nature towards each other, I was merely expanding about how some of their online netizens have a difference of opinion. You just assumed the rest yourself.