China has gone from 1950s technology in the 1980s to the stealthy combat aircraft of today.
No other nation has made such rapid progress in the field of aviation technology in the last forty years as the People's Republic of China (PRC). The majority of new military aircraft types flown in the last 20 years have been Chinese, and today, the Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force and People's Liberation Army Naval Air Force operate a fascinating inventory of diverse aircraft. Here are 10 of China’s best:
10: Shenyang J-8 ‘Finback’

The J-8 combat aircraft series began life as what was essentially a scaled-up MiG-21 (the Soviets had also explored this concept with the Ye-150 series) with the location of air intake, as with the MiG-21, in the nose. The Cultural Revolution massively delayed its development, and despite first flying in 1969, it didn’t enter service until 1980.
The design was obsolete, but many of its shortcomings were rectified in the radically modified J-8II, which replaced the nose air intake with conventional side air intakes to create room for a larger, more modern radar. This aircraft, given the NATO designation Finback-B was so different as to be almost a new aircraft.
10: Shenyang J-8 ‘Finback’

On 1 April 2001, a J-8 collided with a United States Navy Lockheed EP-3E Aries II aircraft 70 miles (112 km) southeast of Hainan Island. The US aircraft was likely on a Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) mission collecting Chinese electronic emissions. One of the two J-8s struck the EP-3 during a series of aggressive passes.
The J-8B crashed and despite escaping the aircraft, its pilot, Wang Wei, was killed after a parachute malfunction. The EP-3E made an emergency landing on Hainan; all 24 crew members survived, and the aircraft was impounded. It is believed the Chinese retrieved something of an intelligence windfall from the EP-3.
9: Xi'an Y-20

This large four-engine strategic airlifter is 47 metres (154 ft 2 in) long and has a maximum take-off weight of around 220,000 kg (485,017 lb). The aircraft has the standard modern configuration for a transport aircraft with a shoulder-mounted wing and a broad T-tail, broader in chord at the top than the bottom (an inverse taper as pioneered on the YC-15).
The Y-20 has an impressive ability to move heavy equipment. It is claimed that the Y-20 can fly 7,800 km (4,800 miles) carrying two Type 15 light tanks (which weigh over 33 tons a piece) or one Type 99A Main Battle Tank weighing over 50 tons 7800 km.

















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