PAK FA - VOOU!!!
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- Túlio
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Se françuá tivesse vergonha de ser 'isso' o PRick nem aparecia...
Pensando bem, ele anda meio devagar por hoje...
Pensando bem, ele anda meio devagar por hoje...
“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
- Edu Lopes
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Aproveito para recomendar aos colegas o tutorial que postei há algum tempo sobre o Video Avatar:P44 escreveu:mas os parafusos continuam a rodar ao contrário
Edu, belos GIFs
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=1804&p=4680960#p4680960
Facinho, facinho. Aproveitem porque o que vai aparecer de vídeos do T-50 não tá no gibi.
- Túlio
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Não quero ser CHATO mas devo lembrar aos colegas que avatar igual é proibido pelo Regulamento, tri?
“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
São coisas diferentes.Túlio escreveu:Se françuá tivesse vergonha de ser 'isso' o PRick nem aparecia...
Pensando bem, ele anda meio devagar por hoje...
Os russos estão à frente em certas coisas mas perdem em outras, como métodos de produção, tecnologia de metais, eletrônica e etc.
Um forista russo comentou sobre isso.
Em tecnologia de Defesa existem os fodões que são EUA e Russia e a França que é fodinha. Os demais são lambe-lambe.
[]'s
Alberto -
Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
deve ser a emoção..........Túlio escreveu:Se françuá tivesse vergonha de ser 'isso' o PRick nem aparecia...
Pensando bem, ele anda meio devagar por hoje...
- Túlio
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
AlbertoRJ escreveu:São coisas diferentes.Túlio escreveu:Se françuá tivesse vergonha de ser 'isso' o PRick nem aparecia...
Pensando bem, ele anda meio devagar por hoje...
Os russos estão à frente em certas coisas mas perdem em outras, como métodos de produção, tecnologia de metais, eletrônica e etc.
Um forista russo comentou sobre isso.
Em tecnologia de Defesa existem os fodões que são EUA e Russia e a França que é fodinha. Os demais são lambe-lambe.
[]'s
Hmmmmmmmm............pensando BEM, alguns deles aparecem mesmo assim...
“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Ou o Carlos é maquiavélico ou pode ter acontecido algo ...
"Em geral, as instituições políticas nascem empiricamente na Inglaterra, são sistematizadas na França, aplicadas pragmaticamente nos Estados Unidos e esculhambadas no Brasil"
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Não se preocupem, o Carlos está em transe ainda, ou bêbado de coca-cola.
Alberto -
- Túlio
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
kurgan escreveu:deve ser a emoção..........Túlio escreveu:Se françuá tivesse vergonha de ser 'isso' o PRick nem aparecia...
Pensando bem, ele anda meio devagar por hoje...
Hoje certamente é um dia memorável e agradeço ao bom Deus (ou mesmo a Nossa Senhora de Kazan) por poder estar vivo e logado: O KURGAN SAIU DOS CONFLITOS, POWS!!!
“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
É verdade... como dizem por aí, devagar e sempreTúlio escreveu:kurgan escreveu: deve ser a emoção..........
Hoje certamente é um dia memorável e agradeço ao bom Deus (ou mesmo a Nossa Senhora de Kazan) por poder estar vivo e logado: O KURGAN SAIU DOS CONFLITOS, POWS!!!
- Anderson TR
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Como diria o chatão do Faustão....Oh loco meeu!!!Finalmente o famoso PaK-FA deu as caras!!!!!
Jesus Cristo meu Senhor -"O Leão da tribo de Judah"!!!
- Túlio
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Bem...lembranças à tigrada do FSB, digas que sempre falo bem de VOSMEÇÊS, tri? Até botei um Coronel na Fênix...
“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
- soultrain
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Quem escreve aquele artigo estúpido no AM???? O PAK, nada tem a ver com o SU...Tem dois motores...
Enfim.
Para mim, a ser verdade, a grande diferença são aquelas antenas AESA espalhadas em várias frequências, aquilo é o verdadeiro trunfo anti-sthealt.
[[]]'s
Enfim.
Para mim, a ser verdade, a grande diferença são aquelas antenas AESA espalhadas em várias frequências, aquilo é o verdadeiro trunfo anti-sthealt.
[[]]'s
"O que se percebe hoje é que os idiotas perderam a modéstia. E nós temos de ter tolerância e compreensão também com os idiotas, que são exatamente aqueles que escrevem para o esquecimento"
NJ
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Eu to achando que o CM voou escondido em uma das bais dos misseis, mas nãi ta conseguindo abrir pra sair!
Um abraço e t+
Um abraço e t+
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Re: PAK FA - VOOU!!!
Ares Blog
T-50: A Preliminary Analysis
Posted by Bill Sweetman at 1/29/2010 10:07 AM CST
Well, this brings back the old days when Flug Revue would pop out some over-the-fence shots obtained from the Military Missions in East Germany, and the assembled reptiles at Flight would adjourn to our secret analysis facility to figure out what it all meant.
First of all, for anyone contemplating the use of the word "Raptorski": don't. While this is an airplane that could have been the answer to the Advanced Tactical Fighter requirement, way back when, it's not an F-22 in many important ways.
In a lot of ways, the T-50 reflects the heritage of the T-10 Flanker series - it's much more like them than Sukhoi's last fighter prototype, the forward-swept-wing Su-47 Berkut, ever was. From the Flanker family, the T-50 gets the massive "centroplane" - a wide central body that blends the fuselage and inner wing - three-surface aerodynamic control and true three-dimensional thrust vectoring. The main weapons bay has been seen on a Flanker model, too.
Look at some of these in detail. The centroplane is huge, extending well outside the engines and terminating at the rear in a broad beaver-tail between the exhaust nozzles.
It accommodates a boatload of fuel on the Flanker and will do the same here. After the canard hokey-pokey in the T-10 family (in on the Su-30MK, out on the Su-35) the T-50 has something different: the forward part of the leading edge extension is movable. According to the usually well informed Flateric over at Secret Projects, it is called the Povorotnaya Chast Naplyva (PChN) or movable LEX section.
3-D thrust vectoring is also used on the Su-35. The T-50 and the T-10 family are distinguished by widely separated engines, which is important because that's the only way to use vectored thrust in roll. What's new on the T-50 is that the designers have cashed in on TVC by shrinking the tail surfaces, saving on drag, weight and signature.
With separated engines and a wide body, the T-50 designers have been able to install dual front and rear weapon bays. Added to this are side bays outboard of the engines. Flateric reports that each bay is designed to hold "at least two" missiles and that the outer bays are designed for short-range AAMs. The centerline bays could each hold two large weapons (like R-33s) or three-to-four of the newly announced RVV-MD. The latter has folding wings, as does the RVV-SD development of the R-73 (AA-11 Archer) family - the latter explaining why the underwing bays are small.
The big new feature of the T-50 is stealth. The aircraft that flew today is a prototype - and it does not show visible features like a frameless canopy and panel alignment that you'd expect on a production aircraft. Other not-very-stealthy-looking features include the gaps around the inlet (compare the YF-23) and a spherical infrared search and track housing in front of the windshield. And, of course, the nozzles are round. But it has a chined forebody, edge alignment and (probably) inlet line-of-sight blockage and internal weapons.
Apparently the designers and systems analysts have looked at the thorny question of "how much stealth do we want to pay for?" and have come up with a different answer than the F-22 designers. The fact that the armed forces of potential adversaries don't have S-300 and S-400 missiles may have something to do with that answer.
Supercruise? Definitely. The aircraft has a lot of power, and you would not go with that sharply swept delta wing if that wasn't the goal.
The big question is how long the aircraft will take to enter service, which is a product of three factors - how much money is available, how many resources industry can muster to get the job done, and where the design, technically, stands at this point.
The first question depends largely on the Russian economy, and on the priority which the military gives to the fighter. At the moment, the strategic rocket forces are the priority and are elbowing all others away from the trough; also, the military could decide that the Su-35 is a good upgrade route for now. The X-factor: whether and when India will join the program, and how much cash it will involve.
The second - industry's ability to execute the program - is hard to estimate. On the downside, Russia has not inducted a brand-new aircraft into service since the 1980s. However, there are signs of a new development strategy at work here: the T-50's engines are outgrowths of the Su-35's and are being test-flown on a T-10 airframe, and the flight control system and (very likely) cockpit and avionics may be similar.
How far along is the program? Russian practice historically has been to start development with a series of prototypes that successively conform more to the production design. That's followed by an early series of aircraft that are "pre-operational" - flown by service units. Today's T-50 is, in US terms, something between a technology demonstrator and a systems development and demonstration aircraft.
Upshot - I would expect to see quite a few Su-35S regiments operational before we see a combat-ready T-50 - but with the caveat that a lot of Indian money could change things.
T-50: A Preliminary Analysis
Posted by Bill Sweetman at 1/29/2010 10:07 AM CST
Well, this brings back the old days when Flug Revue would pop out some over-the-fence shots obtained from the Military Missions in East Germany, and the assembled reptiles at Flight would adjourn to our secret analysis facility to figure out what it all meant.
First of all, for anyone contemplating the use of the word "Raptorski": don't. While this is an airplane that could have been the answer to the Advanced Tactical Fighter requirement, way back when, it's not an F-22 in many important ways.
In a lot of ways, the T-50 reflects the heritage of the T-10 Flanker series - it's much more like them than Sukhoi's last fighter prototype, the forward-swept-wing Su-47 Berkut, ever was. From the Flanker family, the T-50 gets the massive "centroplane" - a wide central body that blends the fuselage and inner wing - three-surface aerodynamic control and true three-dimensional thrust vectoring. The main weapons bay has been seen on a Flanker model, too.
Look at some of these in detail. The centroplane is huge, extending well outside the engines and terminating at the rear in a broad beaver-tail between the exhaust nozzles.
It accommodates a boatload of fuel on the Flanker and will do the same here. After the canard hokey-pokey in the T-10 family (in on the Su-30MK, out on the Su-35) the T-50 has something different: the forward part of the leading edge extension is movable. According to the usually well informed Flateric over at Secret Projects, it is called the Povorotnaya Chast Naplyva (PChN) or movable LEX section.
3-D thrust vectoring is also used on the Su-35. The T-50 and the T-10 family are distinguished by widely separated engines, which is important because that's the only way to use vectored thrust in roll. What's new on the T-50 is that the designers have cashed in on TVC by shrinking the tail surfaces, saving on drag, weight and signature.
With separated engines and a wide body, the T-50 designers have been able to install dual front and rear weapon bays. Added to this are side bays outboard of the engines. Flateric reports that each bay is designed to hold "at least two" missiles and that the outer bays are designed for short-range AAMs. The centerline bays could each hold two large weapons (like R-33s) or three-to-four of the newly announced RVV-MD. The latter has folding wings, as does the RVV-SD development of the R-73 (AA-11 Archer) family - the latter explaining why the underwing bays are small.
The big new feature of the T-50 is stealth. The aircraft that flew today is a prototype - and it does not show visible features like a frameless canopy and panel alignment that you'd expect on a production aircraft. Other not-very-stealthy-looking features include the gaps around the inlet (compare the YF-23) and a spherical infrared search and track housing in front of the windshield. And, of course, the nozzles are round. But it has a chined forebody, edge alignment and (probably) inlet line-of-sight blockage and internal weapons.
Apparently the designers and systems analysts have looked at the thorny question of "how much stealth do we want to pay for?" and have come up with a different answer than the F-22 designers. The fact that the armed forces of potential adversaries don't have S-300 and S-400 missiles may have something to do with that answer.
Supercruise? Definitely. The aircraft has a lot of power, and you would not go with that sharply swept delta wing if that wasn't the goal.
The big question is how long the aircraft will take to enter service, which is a product of three factors - how much money is available, how many resources industry can muster to get the job done, and where the design, technically, stands at this point.
The first question depends largely on the Russian economy, and on the priority which the military gives to the fighter. At the moment, the strategic rocket forces are the priority and are elbowing all others away from the trough; also, the military could decide that the Su-35 is a good upgrade route for now. The X-factor: whether and when India will join the program, and how much cash it will involve.
The second - industry's ability to execute the program - is hard to estimate. On the downside, Russia has not inducted a brand-new aircraft into service since the 1980s. However, there are signs of a new development strategy at work here: the T-50's engines are outgrowths of the Su-35's and are being test-flown on a T-10 airframe, and the flight control system and (very likely) cockpit and avionics may be similar.
How far along is the program? Russian practice historically has been to start development with a series of prototypes that successively conform more to the production design. That's followed by an early series of aircraft that are "pre-operational" - flown by service units. Today's T-50 is, in US terms, something between a technology demonstrator and a systems development and demonstration aircraft.
Upshot - I would expect to see quite a few Su-35S regiments operational before we see a combat-ready T-50 - but with the caveat that a lot of Indian money could change things.
Sempre e inevitavelmente, cada um de nós subestima o número de indivíduos estúpidos que circulam pelo mundo.
Carlo M. Cipolla
Carlo M. Cipolla