CAC/PAC JF-17 Thunder

The PAC JF-17 Thunder (Urdu: جے ایف-١٧ تھنڈر‎), or CAC FC-1 Xiaolong (Fierce Dragon; Chinese: 枭龙; pinyin: Xiāo Lóng), is a light-weight, single-engine, multi-role combat aircraft developed jointly by the Pakistan Air Force, the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) and the Chengdu Aircraft Industries Corporation (CAC) of China. Its designation "JF-17 Thunder" by Pakistan is short for "Joint Fighter-17", while the designation "FC-1 Xiaolong" by China means "Fighter China-1 Fierce Dragon".

The JF-17 can carry a variety of missiles and bombs, including air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles, supplemented by a 23/30 mm GSh-23-2 twin-barrel autocannon. It is powered by a RD-93 afterburning turbofan, and has a top speed of Mach 1.6. The JF-17 is slated to become the backbone of Pakistan Air Force (PAF), complementing the F-16s as well as the J-10Bs (on order) within its aircraft ranks and is also expected to fill the duties of aerial reconnaissance, ground-attack and interception.

Pakistan has already started induction, and has plans to induct around 250 units. The JF-17 will replace Pakistan's ageing fleet of A-5C, Mirage-III, Mirage-V, and F-7P/PG by 2015. The first squadron was inducted in the Pakistan Air Force in February 2010. In China it is in an evaluation phase (passed design appraisal).

Variants

 * JF-17 Block 1: Production in China began in June 2006. The first three Chinese weapons to be integrated are the PL-5E II AAM, the SD-10 AAM, and the C-802A anti-shipping missile. Block 1 aircraft had performed "better than expected" according to PAF Air Commodore Junaid. Production of Block 1 was completed on December 18th when the fiftieth aircraft—58% of which was produced in Pakistan—was delivered. A Block 1 JF-17 had cost approximately US$15 million per unit.
 * JF-17 Block 2: Production began on December 18th 2013 and initial testing began on February 9th, 2015. These aircraft have air-to-air refueling capability, improved avionics, enhanced load carrying capacity, data link, and electronic warfare capabilities. The construction will continue until 2016, after which the manufacture of Block 3 is planned. A Block 2 JF-17 costs approximately US$25 million per unit. Chairman of PAC, Air Marshal Javaid Ahmed said: "We will hand over sixteen Block-II JF-17s to the PAF every year", and that the manufacturing plant has the capacity to produce 25 units in a year. According to local media, PAC rolled out the 16th Block 2 aircraft in December 2015 enabling the 4th JF17 squadron to be stood up. The JF-17B two seat version would start testing in September 2016.
 * JF-17 Block 3: Projected to feature further avionics advancements such as an AESA radar, more use of composites, a new engine, helmet mounted display, and a two-seater cockpit option, with a top speed of 2.0+ Mach. Pakistani Air Force officials have described it as a "fourth generation plus" fighter jet. According to unconfirmed media reports the induction is expected to start around 2019. As of January 2016, the design of the JF-17 Block III has not been finalized.
 * JF-17B: A twin-seater variant scheduled to be inducted into the Pakistan Air Force by 2017, its multi-roles include use for training and enhanced surveillance and support capabilities. The production of the first JF-17B was initiated by Pakistan and China in 2016. On April 28th 2017, the JF-17B took its maiden test flight in Chengdu.

Users

 * Azerbaijan
 * Azerbaijani Air Force x 12
 * Myanmar
 * Myanmar Air Force x 16
 * Nigeria
 * Nigerian Air Force x 14
 * Pakistan
 * Pakistan Air Force x 136 delivered, 64 more on order
 * PAF Base Minhas
 * JF-17 TEF (Test and Evaluation Flight)
 * PAF Base Peshawar
 * No. 16 Squadron Black Panthers
 * No. 26 Squadron Black Spiders
 * PAF Base Masroor
 * No. 2 Squadron Minhas
 * PAF Base Mushaf
 * Combat Commanders School
 * PAF Base Minhas
 * No. 14 Squadron Tail Choppers
 * PAF Base Samungli
 * No. 28 Squadron Phoenix
 * Sri Lanka
 * Sri Lankan Air Force x 24
 * Sudan
 * Sudanese Air Force x 12
 * Zimbabwe
 * Zimbabwe Air Force x 12