Chinese PLAAF News

How could this possibly be the H-20.....

Its size is so small.......

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You can see the staff below.

This place looks more like a scientific research institution.

From the analysis of the national military development strategy, we don't currently need a new type of bomber. The reason is that the mission of a bomber is to carry out strikes outside the enemy's defense zone, not to fly over the enemy and drop bombs. Long-range missiles can satisfy this tactic, and the bomber is just a platform. Bombers only need to carry out launch missions outside the enemy radar detection range (over 600 km).

Pakistan's use of J-10C and PL-15 confirmed the reliability of this tactic. The J-10C launched PL-15 from outside India's radar detection range. The Pakistani military suffered no losses, but the results were very impressive.

The aircraft in the image/CGI looks considerably larger than B-21 and only slightly smaller than B-2 if even that.

Also your other examples make no sense at all. Stand off only is not good enough. Stand off and being able to drop dumb bombs right on top of target is valuable and I'm not sure why you can't understand this. GJ-11 is doing exactly both stand off attacks and cheaper attacks. Stand off weapons are 10x more costly and harder to make than glide bombs.

China has pursued both just like it pursued asymmetric means to counter America while also pursuing symmetric dominance. It builds both detonation engine powered hypersonic weapons and unguided rockets fired off J-20. It's all pursued. I bet H-20 will need to have ability to drop iron bombs and glide bombs.
 
This CGI or photo reminds me of the JH-xx program which came out with some hints between 2017 and 2020 time period.

Starting from the mockup displayed for future supersonic strike aircraft in 2013.

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Then a couple of mystery aircraft in background from I think it was XAC which makes some sense seeing as they are developing H-20 and other heavy aircraft. Image from around 2020.

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This image is often also associated with this program seeing as a Flanker doesn't belong in XAC and also wouldn't be blurred. Image online from 2022

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Even Ordinance magazine published this aircraft as front cover in 2018.

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The cockpit shape and details seem to line up with the new photo/CGI.

There was a photo of students visiting XAC or some other aircraft manufacturing facility where they had a mockup cockpit in the background of the image that resembles exactly this shape. This was around 2020 as well. I can't find that image anymore but I'm sure some people have it saved somewhere.

So if size is indeed small (hard to judge from camera and lack of reference points), it could point towards JH-xx rather than H-20. Of course all assuming it's a photo.

Canted "tail", dorsal intakes near wing root, cockpit shape, radome and cockpit blend geometry. All lines up.

We should remember that the shape of J-36 and J-50 were both leaked many years before their prototype flights in public. Both of those aircraft's planforms were leaked in the background of officially sanctioned images that were for other things. Deino should be aware of the images I'm referring to where the shape of the J-36 and J-50 were both in some company promotion material and logos or banners in the background of photos where people are presented with awards and that sort of thing. I'm just saying these sorts of methods are very Chinese. The JH-xx shape as been sort of teased for a long time. Just like J-36 and J-50 planforms at least were teased for many years before reveal.
 

China’s ‘Bohai Sea Monster’ Ekranoplan Emerges in Clearest Images Yet​

Published on: May 25, 2026 at 9:55 PMGoogle News IconFollow Us On Google News
Parth Satam

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The Chinese ekranoplan aircraft with two underwing pylons visible under the starboard wing. (Image credit: ‘Tomboy/SDF’ on Chinese internet via Andreas Rupprecht on X)
 

New images bring more clarity about China’s Y-15

By May Lee | 5 June 2026

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The Y-15 reflects China's efforts to modernise its airlift capabilities. Source: Chinese social media

China’s new tactical transport likely seen as a replacement for the workhorse Y-9 family.

Improved images of China’s new Shaanxi Y-15/Y-30 tactical transport have emerged, offering details about the new type that resembles the Airbus Defence & Space A400M.

The four-engined aircraft is tentatively designated Y-15, although it has also been referred to as the Y-30.

Images of the aircraft conducting test flights over the city of Xian indicate that it is likely powered by the new Aero Engine Corporation of China WJ-10 turboprop, the nacelles of which cut a distinctly boxier profile compared with that of the Dongan WJ-6, which powers the earlier Y-9.

The aircraft first appeared on Chinese social media in December 2025.

The aircraft also has a long probe extending from above the cockpit. This is probably an air data boom to support testing activity, but given China’s emphasis on air-to-air refuelling, this position could perhaps accommodate a refuelling probe in production aircraft.

This location is also where the air-to-air refuelling probe is located on other large Chinese military aircraft, namely the Shaanxi KJ-500A and Xian KJ-3000 airborne early warning and control aircraft.

One notable difference between the Y-15 and A400M is the main landing gear. The main bogies of the A400M have six wheels each, but the Y-15’s main bogies have four wheels each.

The Y-15 is understood to be smaller than the A400M, allowing it to have four-wheel main bogies similar to the Lockheed Martin C-130.

Apart from the test-flight images shared on social media, little is known about the Y-15 programme, such as the testing schedule and when the type will enter People’s Liberation Army Air Force service.

Moreover, images from China need to be treated with caution given the ease of photo manipulation with artificial intelligence.

That said, the Y-9 entered service in 2012 and became fully operational in 2017. While the Y-9 remains in production, Beijing clearly seeks a more capable aircraft in the form of the Y-15.

 

Official PLA Y-20 promo video debuts rare footage of H-6N aerial refueling, surface-to-air missile loading​

SourceGlobal TimesEditorCheng SihaoTime2026-06-29 10:57:54


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Y-20B large transport aircraft are parked on the tarmac.

As the camera slowly pans across the tarmac, three members in China's Y-20 large domestic transport aircraft family - the Y-20A, Y-20B and YU-20 - stand side by side. This rare scene appeared in an exclusive new Y-20 promotional video released on Sunday by China Bugle, an official media account affiliated with the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) news media center.

The video came ahead of the 10th anniversary of the Y-20's official induction into the PLA Air Force. In addition to close-up shots of the domestically developed WS-20 turbofan engine, the footage also showed, for the first time, aerial refueling of an H-6N bomber through a YU-20 and the loading of surface-to-air missiles onto a Y-20.

On July 6, 2016, China's domestically developed next-generation large military transport aircraft, the Y-20, was officially commissioned into PLA Air Force aviation units. A decade later, the Y-20 has evolved from a single transport platform into a family of models including the Y-20A, Y-20B and YU-20 aerial refueling tanker, with its flight paths covering more than 40 countries across four continents, said the Aviation Industry Corporation of China, the maker of the aircraft, on its Wechat account on Sunday.

Experts told the Global Times that with the Y-20B now equipped with the domestically produced WS-20 engines, its production capacity is rapidly ramping up, steadily advancing toward greater combat readiness, scale and system integration. This holds significant importance for the PLA Air Force in fulfilling humanitarian assistance missions, international security obligations and safeguarding regional stability.

Hard power, stronger reach

The China Bugle video first highlighted the Y-20's loading capacity. It can carry a Type 99A main battle tank, or three light infantry fighting vehicles, as well as missile launch vehicles and even the Chang'e-6 lunar sample return spacecraft - essentially anything on land, in the air or underwater. As the video puts it, if the DF-series ballistic missiles were to give permission, they could also be transported.

Zhang Junshe, a Chinese military affairs expert, told the Global Times on Sunday that the footage offers rare official images of the Y-20 loading surface-to-air missiles.

Zhang said that the Y-20B is China's most advanced domestically developed heavy transport aircraft. Compared with the Y-20A, its power system has been fully upgraded, with significant improvements in both speed and range. The Y-20B's ability to rapidly deploy heavy air defense systems such as the HQ-9B will enhance the PLA Air Force's all-domain operational capabilities.

Beyond showcasing transport capabilities, the video also demonstrated the powerful aerial refueling capacity of the YU-20, which is based on the Y-20 platform. The footage shows the YU-20 refueling not only fighter jets such as the J-35, J-20, J-16 and J-15, but also, as Zhang said, in rare clear detail, the H-6N bomber.

By being able to refuel such a wide range of platforms, the YU-20 can double - or even multiply - operational radius, enabling missions around the island of Taiwan, across far seas and over high plateaus, according to the video clip.

Zhang noted that the H-6N is the latest model in the H-6 bomber series. Equipped with an aerial refueling probe, the H-6N can coordinate with the YU-20 tanker to significantly extend its range and operational radius.

With close-up shots of the WS-20 engine, the video showed that in 2025, the Y-20B was fitted with the WS-20, making it more powerful, more fuel-efficient, longer-ranged and part of a growing family of aircraft.

"The Y-20B is the most advanced domestically developed heavy transport aircraft in China to date. Compared with the Y-20A, its power system and other systems including hydraulics have been upgraded. For pilots, the most intuitive experience is that the aircraft performs with greater quality and agility," Jin Jian, a pilot from a PLA Air Force aviation unit, was quoted by CCTV News on Sunday as saying.

The most significant upgrade of the Y-20B over the Y-20A is the replacement of engines with the high-bypass-ratio turbofan WS-20. With the WS-20 engines, the Y-20B's cargo capacity and range have been greatly increased. The WS-20 technology is now mature and ready for mass production, Zhang said.

The large-scale development and production capacity growth of the Y-20 is built on the foundation of full domestic production and self-reliance in all key technologies, especially the WS-20 engine. Before domestically developed engines entered service, relying on imported engines made mass production or capacity expansion challenging, Wang Ya'nan, editor-in-chief of Beijing-based Aerospace Knowledge magazine, told the Global Times on Sunday.

Zhang also mentioned that the Y-20B also possesses strong multi-mission expansion potential and modular conversion capability, allowing it to be quickly converted into a tanker, early warning aircraft or electronic warfare aircraft.

Furthermore, with its intercontinental delivery capability, the Y-20B can play a greater role in global humanitarian and disaster relief operations, better fulfilling the responsibilities of a major country and making greater contributions to regional and global security, Zhang added.

Global duties, future edge

As Zhang put it, the China Bugle video showed that the Y-20 can not only carry hardware and equipment, but also fly to more than 40 countries with compassion and longing over the past decade.

Most recently, China dispatched a Y-20B large transport aircraft to the Republic of Korea on April 20 to carry back the 13th batch of remains of Chinese soldiers who died during the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea (1950-53). This was the first time the PLA Air Force dispatched a Y-20B for the repatriation, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

Beyond demonstrating existing capabilities, the video concluded with a dialogue-based plot, featuring a fleeting glimpse of what appears to be a sixth-generation fighter, which has sparked discussion online. Some netizens speculated that the clip suggests the YU-20 could be capable of refueling sixth-generation fighters.

On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Y-20's induction into the PLA Air Force, the official release further showcases the Y-20's mass production capabilities and its wide range of capabilities and potential, Wang said. This is significant in demonstrating the PLA Air Force's commitment to fulfilling international security obligations and safeguarding regional stability.

Over the past decades, what the Chinese air force has lacked is strategic mobility - the ability to rapidly deploy large numbers of troops and equipment across theater-level distances. The Y-20 solves this problem, with its large single-load capacity and ability to achieve rapid theater-level mobility, giving China strategic airlift capability for the first time. For the PLA, this enhances capabilities for both combat and non-combat missions. From a national security perspective, it safeguards the country's security. Without large transport aircraft, it would be impossible to fully fulfill humanitarian assistance and international obligations, Wang explained.

Today, as CCTV reported, post-2000-born pilots have also joined the ranks of China's large transport aircraft fleet.

"I aim to fly more advanced and larger strategic transport aircraft in the future, to explore new routes and places we've never been before," Gao Rui, a pilot from a PLA Air Force aviation unit, was quoted by CCTV as saying.

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BRAVO! Chinese PLA Air Forces​

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