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What is the difference between F-16C Fighting Falcon and JF-17 Thunder in terms of role?

When does someone use an F-16C and when does someone use JF-17?

2 Answers2

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Firstly, you should understand that these two fighters are from different countries (F-16 hails from the US and serves with many NATO countries, the JF-17 is a Chinese design), but were developed along closely parallel project focuses. The F-16 was developed with the advent of highly maneuverable and powerful Russian air-superiority fighters such as the MiG-29 in mind.

Designed along the inherently unstable design idea, the F-16 is pretty much the epitome of maneuverable and agile fighting machines. In addition it was meant to be produced in relatively greater numbers than its much faster, heavier, and air-superiority focused cousin the F-15. This is one aspect that it accomplished very very well as the F-16 was quickly run into mass-production via bulk requests from the USAF which, at the time, had much greater funding that it does now. The F-16 turned out as an affordable fighter that was good enough for the USAF, not too good to be banned from international export, and flexible enough to be used in a variety of roles and ensured its use well into the 21st century.

The more obscure JF-17 is a Chinese design meant to do the same thing the F-16 did when it came out. Chengdu wanted a fighter that was rather maneuverable, and was viable and cheap enough to succeed in the international market. What resulted from a joint project between PAC and Chengdu was a fighter that could compete both in real-life maneuvering and technologically with its peers. In addition at only $15 million per unit for a block 1 type JF-17 it is one of the cheapest 4th generation aircraft of its kind available.

The two aircraft were built with similar roles in mind, and in practice fulfill them similarly as a result. The F-16 is in some ways the superior of the two, having benefited from lessons learned in many deployments around the world, but both are designed for multi-role usage, inexpensive operation, and affordability en masse.

FreeMan
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Jihyun
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  • What would take a JF-17 to achieve the same capability of an F-16? Would much stronger engine and avionics do the trick? Or the current airframe is too bad a design to achieve the same? –  Mar 24 '18 at 16:39
  • No the airframe is actually decently designed as far as I can tell. The cost of implementing more powerful engines and larger/better avionics however would offset the potential cost savings of buying the JF-17 over the F-16 – Jihyun Mar 24 '18 at 16:42
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    Your 2nd sentence makes no sense: the F-16 first flew more than 3 years *before* the SU-27. (Interestingly, the JF-17 first flew almost 3 decades after the first F-16’s initial flight.) – Ralph J Mar 24 '18 at 22:49
  • Apologies, I meant the MiG-29. I will fix this – Jihyun Mar 25 '18 at 00:46
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    The MiG-29 *also* didn’t fly until about 3 years after the F-16. Maybe you should do some research on your facts & your premise before posting. – Ralph J Mar 25 '18 at 19:05
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    First of all I explained this and your comments are uncalled for. Stop being antagonistic and read my answer. I'm sure you'll learn a few things and understand what I meant if you look at the rest of the post. – Jihyun Apr 12 '18 at 15:30
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There is no significant difference, both are "multi-role" fighters, which just means that they can carry out ground attack missions as well as destroy other aircraft.

Multi-role fighters generally have ranges that are longer than fighter aircraft, but shorter than dedicated bombers.

The main tactical difference between the F-16C and the JF-17 is that the F-16 is more powerful both in its armament carrying capability and its fighting maneoverability, so it has much better air-to-air combat survivability.

Tyler Durden
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