Chengdu J-9

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Chengdu J-9 was a designation assigned to a light air superiority fighter under Project 33 (not to be confused with Mig-33) that never went past initial studies.The Chengdu J-9 was scrapped for the more advanced JF-17 Thunder which is a fourth generation fighter jet developed jointly by Pakistan and China under the Project name Super Seven.

Note: Not to be confused with GAIGC JL-9/FTC-2000 jet trainer.

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Alternate view from China-Defense.com

The J-9 project ran in parallel with the J-8 project but used a completely new airframe.It adopted the Canard (aeronautics). The design target maximum speed was Mach 2.4 at above 20,000 metres altitude. In order to achieve this target the J-9 was fitted with an 8,500kg thrust turbojet engine and the 601 Institute initially used a tailless delta design. Development at this point shifted to the newly built 611 Institute and the Chengdu Aircraft Factory. At the beginning of the 1970s, the 611 Institute proposed a new design using a canard ahead of the delta wing (similar to the Swedish Viggen), but because it required new materials and know-how plus engine performance problems it wasn't until 1975 before the design could be completed. The new J-9 design was quite advanced with air intakes on the fuselage sides featuring variable inlet geometry to alter the compression mixture. It used a 12,400 kg wet thrust turbofan engine and featured a Type 205 radar (search range about 70km) and four PL-4 radar-guided air-to-air missiles. The J-9 plan was discontinued in 1980. However, the effort was not totally wasted as the J-9 development enabled Chinese engineers to gain experience with the canard layout type, experience that would prove useful in the J-10 project.

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