



| Name | J‑16D Electronic Warfare Variant |
| Manufacturer | Shenyang Aircraft Corporation (AVIC) |
| Country of Origin | People’s Republic of China |
| Introduction / In Service Since | Variant first flight Dec 2015; in service mid-2010s |
| Status | Operational with PLAAF |
| Category | Twin-engine, twin-seat multirole/EW fighter |
| Crew | 2 |
| Unit Cost | Not publicly disclosed |
| Length | ~21.9 m (71 ft 10 in) |
| Wingspan | ~14.7 m (48 ft 3 in) |
| Height | ~6.36 m (20 ft 10 in) |
| Wing Area | ~62 m² (estimated) |
| Empty Weight | ~17,700 kg (39,000 lb) |
| Maximum Takeoff Weight (MTOW) | ~35,000 kg (77,100 lb) |
| Maximum Speed | ~Mach 2.0 / ~2,120 km/h |
| Range | ~3,000 km (~1,900 mi) |
| Combat Radius | Not publicly confirmed |
| Service Ceiling | ~17,300 m (56,800 ft) |
| Rate of Climb | ~230 m/s (~45,000 ft/min) |
| Engine Type | 2 × Shenyang WS‑10B afterburning turbofans |
| Thrust (per engine) | ~135 kN (~30,000 lbf) |
| Total Thrust | ~270 kN |
| Internal Payload Capacity | None (primarily external) |
| Weapons Bay | None (external hardpoints only) |
| Compatible Weapons | Air-to-air missiles (PL‑9, PL‑12, PL‑15), anti-ship missiles, anti-radiation missiles, guided bombs |
| Hardpoints | 12 external hardpoints |
| Radar System | AESA radar (Chinese-developed) |
| Navigation | Advanced digital navigation with datalink integration |
| Electronic Warfare (EW) | Wingtip EW pods, internal EW suite |
| Stealth Features | Radar-absorbent materials, limited signature reduction |
| Primary Operator | People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) |
| Conflict Usage | Active near South China Sea & Taiwan Strait |
| Notable Missions | Interceptions & close encounters with foreign aircraft |
| Variants | J‑16 (base), J‑16D (EW), J‑16Zhi‑Sheng (“AI‑WSO”) |
| Successor / Future Replacement | Unknown; China developing 5‑gen and stealth platforms |
| Notable Features | Wingtip EW pods, dual-seat crew, multirole payload integration |
| Estimated Operational Life | ~30 years depending on upgrades |
Originating in the People’s Republic of China, the J‑16D serves primarily in the electronic‑warfare and suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD) role. First flight of the EW‑specific variant occurred in December 2015. Unlike the base J‑16, the J‑16D replaces traditional gun armament and IRST sensor packages with dedicated wingtip EW pods and internal avionics geared to jamming, signal interception and networked operations.
The J‑16 airframe features twin WS‑10B after‑burning turbofan engines, twin‑seat tandem configuration, a maximum speed in excess of Mach 2.0 (approx. 2,120 km/h) and a combat range around 3,000 km. In the EW‑variant J‑16D, the major structural and powerplant performance remain largely the same, but the mission loadout shifts to electronic attack and support rather than pure kinetic strike. The platform supports twelve external hardpoints and advanced avionics including an AESA radar and modern datalink/ECM suite.
The J‑16D has been observed in service with the PLAAF, operating in contested maritime zones and conducting missions that challenge foreign surveillance assets. For a U.S.‑audience, its role resembles that of the U.S. Navy’s EA‑18G Growler in concept—even if exact capabilities differ.
The J‑16D enters the arena as a specialized electronic‑warfare (EW) variant of China’s multirole strike fighter family. Developed by Shenyang Aircraft Corporation under the parent company Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), the J‑16D is derived from the earlier J‑16 “Qianlong” platform and optimized for the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) in its role as a networked disruptor and support asset.
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