Wonderful strawman arguments you have there,
@Nx4eu, watch out they don't blow away in a light breeze. I get this is the discussion and speculation topic but still -
We've known for a while that the J-20 is overall competitive in range, stealth, and sensor capabilities with every fighter the American side currently has in its arsenal. Hence the need for the longer-ranged and more revolutionary F/A-XX and NGAD designs...
China did an excellent job with speedy development of the J-20 ahead of Western estimates. The weaponry and avionics look good on paper. China does, however, lack experience in warfare and active use of their equipment in real world engagements.
Low probability of intercept radar design is complex, and algorithms for TWS, NTCR, ECCM etc are closely guarded secrets and evolved and refined in the US (and UK, France..) over many years and generations of radar designs. Counting the number of AESA elements, or reading placard range on a radar display at Zhuhai, doesn't speak to these essential characteristics, so its hard to conclude the J-20 is competitive. Maybe China will hit it out the park on first try, but history suggests real world experience is a great teacher.
Additionally, they have had challenges getting up to speed with engine development, and J-20 still hasn't reached parity in this area. As
@F119Doctor has noted in other topics, supercruise requires a specifically optimised engine design. WS-15 may be such an engine. WS-10 is not. We don't at this stage know how much fuel the J-20 carries, so its hard to be certain of its range. We can make estimates, but we don't
know.
Rough RCS analysis tools such as we have show J-35 does not appear to be shaped with
all-aspect VLO in mind. The basic configuration is not optimal for stealth, and there's only so much you can do with materials. It is likely the stealth requirements for J-20 were notably lesser than F-22, especially in the side and rear aspect.
It's still likely that its
better in this respect than any fighter in service outside F-22 and F-35. But that doesn't mean we can conclude its
'competitive in stealth' with the F-22, which seems to be your conclusion.
When you make statements like
We've known for a while that the J-20 is overall competitive in range, stealth, and sensor capabilities with every fighter the American side currently has in its arsenal.
it comes across a bit "
China Stronk". If you want sound more credible, cite the sources that lead you to this opinion. The specific source cited above is much more about redirecting Congress from funding costly upgrades to near-obsolete early F-22 Blocks to spending in more useful areas than anything else.
US Air Force sources have generally been surprised by the rapid pace of China's developments, but still reasonably confident an American pilot in the F-22 Block 35 could still handle the J-20. However the margin of superiority has been
significantly eroded and this is a pretty awesome achievement for China.
Back to topic....
The J-36 represents a possible turning point here, and the USAF needs to pick a path forward pretty soon or get left behind.