Nanchang Q-5
The first prototype was completed in 1960.A small team kept the program
alive until it was re-opened in 1963, when production was shifted to
Nanchang. The first flight finally occurred on 4 June 1965. Series
production began in 1969, with squadron delivery starting in 1970.
About 1,000 aircraft were produced, 600 of them being the updated Q-5A. A
small number, perhaps a few dozen, Q-5As were modified to carry nuclear
weapons; these are believed to retain their internal weapons bay. A
long-range Q-5I, introduced in 1983, added a fuel tank instead of the
internal weapons bay, compensating for that with the provision of two
additional under wing pylons.
Hong-5 light bomber
The
H-5 (Hongzha-5, or Hong-5) is a Chinese copy of the Soviet Union/Russian
IL-28 (NATO codename: Beagle) twin-engine jet bomber aircraft first
introduced in the Soviet Air Force in the late 1940s. China obtained
several hundred examples of the IL-28 in the 1950s during the honeymoon
period of the Sino-Soviet ally. A licensed production of the aircraft in
China was scheduled but the project could not be materialised due to
the breaking up of the Sino-Soviet relation in 1960. As a result, Harbin
Aircraft Factory (now Harbin Aircraft Manufacturing Company, HAMC) was
ordered to produce a Chinese version of the IL-28 by
reverse-engineering.
The aerial arsenal of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army shrank
by nearly a quarter over the past year, from around 3,400 combat
aircraft to just under 2,600. The best assessment of the secretive PLA, a database managed by Flight International magazine and updated annually, showed 800 fewer jet fighters in the PLA inventory compared to a year ago.
The reduction reflects "improved data," according to Flight's annual
report, released late last month. The data allowed the report's authors
to remove from the PLA's active rolls a "combined 850 obsolete Harbin
H-5 and Nanchang Q-5 combat aircraft." The H-5 and Q-5 date from the
mid-1960s. It's unclear exactly when the PLA retired the two models.
The PLA isn’t alone in shedding combat aircraft. Most of the world's
major air arms are slowly shrinking, owing to decreasing military
budgets and the tendency of planners to favor small numbers of high-tech
new aircraft over larger numbers of less-sophisticated, older models.
The U.S. Air Force is replacing more than 400 F-15s with just 187 newer
F-22s, for instance. China built hundreds of H-5s and more than 1,500
Q-5s, but has built just 300 or so combined of more recent warplanes
such as the J-10 and J-11.
The PLA’s warplane holdings have apparently contracted at an even
faster rate than the Pentagon's, growing the gap between the two aerial
powers and cementing the U.S. military's position as the dominant
aerospace power. The U.S. Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, Army and Coast
Guard together operate 13,000 manned aircraft. Number two Russia
operates 3,600. China, in third place, possesses 2,600 warplanes. Of
roughly 5,400 warplanes on firm order as of late 2011, the Americans
accounted for 1,700. "This [U.S.] dominance shows no sign of being
diminished for many years to come," Flight reports.
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