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The Chengdu J-9 (Chinese: 歼-9) was an interceptor aircraft that was cancelled during development in the People's Republic of China (PRC). It was proposed in 1964 by the 601 Institute (Shenyang) as a higher-performing alternative to the Shenyang J-8.[1] Development was disrupted by the Cultural Revolution and frequently changing requirements; in addition, development was transferred to the 611 Institute (Chengdu). The program was cancelled in 1980.[2][3]

J-9
General information
TypeInterceptor
ManufacturerChengdu Aircraft Industry Corporation
Designer
StatusCancelled in 1980

Development

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By 1964, the Chengdu J-7 was inadequate to perform long-range, high-altitude interceptions. The Chinese Aeronautical Establishment held a conference on 25 October to discuss future fighters. The 601 Institute had two proposals; a twin-engined "scaled-up" J-7 which became the J-8,[4] and a higher-performing single-engined option that became the J-9. The J-9 was technically riskier; it was not based on an existing design, and the required engine - an afterburning turbofan generating 83 kN (19,000 lbf) dry and 121 kN (27,000 lbf) reheat thrust - did not exist in China.[1] Shenyang developed a delta and a double-delta concept in 1965.[2]

Development was officially approved following a Ministry of Aerospace Industry (MAI) conference on 12-17 January 1966[1] with the goal of either an air superiority fighter or a pure interceptor. This was revised on April 1 with new requirements for endurance, rate of climb, and significantly increased range. A development schedule was approved on April 12.[2] Shenyang responded first with the J-9A-IV (a tailed delta with lateral intakes) and then the J-9B-V (a tailless-delta); the former was unable to meet requirements. The Cultural Revolution paused development.[2] Development on the J-9B-V resumed in 1968. The goal of flying a prototype by the 20th anniversary of the PRC in October 1969 could not be achieved due to major development problems. MAI shifted work back to the J-9A-IV. In addition, development was transferred to Chengdu because Shenyang was now fully occupied with the J-8. Wang Shounan became the new chief designer.[2]

The Ministry of Defense issued new requirements on 9 June 1970 - and slightly revised in November - for even greater range, speed, and altitude. Chengdu abandoned the J-9A-IV, and reworked the J-9B-V into the J-9B-VI. The J-9B-VI was a canard-delta with lateral intakes; a single ventral intake was rejected. The intended engine, the Woshan WS-6 turbofan, encountered development problems; a reverse-engineered Khachaturov R29-300 turbojet, to be called the WS-15, was selected as a less powerful alternative.[2]

The requirements were revised in February 1975, calling for more range and an armament of four PL-4 air-to-air missiles. In November the State Planning Commission approved funding for five prototypes, with the first flight to take place in late-1980 or early-1981. However, the program was ended in 1980.[2]

Specifications (J-9B-VI)

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Data from [2][3]

General characteristics

  • Wing area: 55.7 m2 (600 sq ft) including canards
  • Empty weight: 13,000 kg (28,660 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Woshan WS-6 turbofan engine, 122.5 kN (27,500 lbf) thrust , or "WS-15" (reverse-engineered Khachaturov R29-300) turbojet, 81 kN (18,000 lbf) thrust

Performance

  • Maximum speed: Mach 2.5 at 23,000 m (75,000 ft)
  • Range: 2,000 km (1,200 mi, 1,100 nmi)
  • Rate of climb: 220 m/s (43,000 ft/min)

Armament

Avionics
Type 205 radar

See also

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Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b c Gordon and Komissarov (2008): page 90
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Gordon and Komissarov (2008): page 91
  3. ^ a b Gordon and Komissarov (2008): page 92
  4. ^ Gordon and Komissarov (2008): page 75

Bibliography

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  • Gordon, Yefim; Komissarov, Dmitry (2008). Chinese Aircraft: China's aviation industry since 1951. Manchester: Hikoki Publications. ISBN 978-1-902109-04-6.
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