mao... nya wala sad ta kahibaw onsay capabilities sa north. secretive baya kaayo na sila sa ilang military strength and technology. its much scarier to think if you don't know what your enemy has than an enemy you know so much.
alkansi man gyud ang North Korea in terms of technology and conventional arms..mao the only way for them to seize the initiative and gain advantage is through their nuclear arsenal..
[QUOTE=wak_wak;4193311]
Bro mao ni present inventory sa NOKOR has roughly 150-300 more aircraft, but mostly obsolete types of Soviet and Chinese origin.
Il-28 -- 3
Su- 25/7 -- 1
MiG-19/A-5 -- 2
MiG- 15/17 -- 2
Mura di nani maka abot sa Seoul bro, kay sugaton ni sila sa fighter planes sa South, as of 2007, it operated more than 180KF-16C/D, 32 F-15Ks with the rest of the 29 F-15Ks being delivered by June 2010, The Korean variant of F-15E were named F-15K Slam Eagles.
yes you maybe correct in theory, but you don't know what is the real thing.
the point is i Think the south knows what the north is capable of even beyond the numbers you were mentioning. as you mentioned on the deliveries, di na magpadeliver og ingon ana ka sophisticated na technology ang south if they were thinking the obsolete ang opponent.
well the UN and the rest of the world is somehow focusing on Nokor. They could be a threat to world peace.
hehe... dli na mao ang aircraft inventory sa Nokor.. North Korea has 770 fighters, 80 bombers, 700 transports, 290 helicopters, ..ilang advance aircraft kai Mig 29..
Nokor will rely on massive conventional warfare and weapons of mass destruction...
Ang Amerika... mag duhaČ ug attack sa Nokor... during sa time ni Clinton.. attackon unta ug F117 ang "Nuke facilities" as a preemptive measures.. pero wala.. taman ra cla sa sanctions..
Last edited by flanker; 03-17-2009 at 06:49 PM.
true they have that number of planes..
As of 2007, North Korea's airforce comprises about 1,200 - 1500 aircraft and 110,000 personnel, about twice the number of aircraft as the South. Most of its aircraft are obsolete Soviet and Chinese models, but it has been modernizing since the 1980s, acquiring relatively new aircraft such as the MiG-29.
pero as you can see, mga old aircraft na ni.. no match for the F-16 and F-15. Maybe they can use this as kamikazi fighters nalang. kay kung air to air, i dont think so.
and in terms sa training, the amount of annual flying hours (AFH) per pilot is, like almost every other aspect of the NKAF, very hard to estimate. Most sources on the subject abstain from giving hard numbers, but all of them estimate the average annual flying hours per pilot as being 'low' to 'very low'. The amount of annual flying hours is of course very important in estimating the individual skill and experience of the pilots of an air force and the general rule of thumb is 'the more the merrier'. Most estimates present a rather grim picture: AFH per pilot for the NKAF are said to be only 7, 15 or 25 hours per pilot each year - comparable to the flying hours of air forces in ex-Soviet countries in the early 1990s. In comparison, most NATO fighter pilots fly at least 150 hours a year.
clinton administartion are afraid to do such action, kung bush pa na administration for sure naa jud pre emptive strike.
Last edited by wak_wak; 03-17-2009 at 07:16 PM.
war freaks..... daan najud ning mga korean countries...... sa makuna lang... ^^
wala man sad kaon ang mga tag- north korea.. mag-ampo ta na ang ila mga sundalo kay ingon ana sad...
Finally, was able to model the actual size of the Taepodong-1 in Orbiter. I used 3D Studio MAX to model the 3 stages, but didn't make any payload/satellite, and just pretended that the 3rd stage is a nuclear warhead
I used these images (from Astronautix.com) as reference:
http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/taeodong.htm
Looks like I managed to make a decent enough model...what do you think? I was curious to see how big it was, and to my surprise, it's quite small diay, smaller even than a Redstone.
You can see from this image how small it is, just over 30 meters tall. I put the astronaut there for size comparison.
I also placed the Space Shuttle Atlantis beside it so you can see how small it is.
I wrote a a guidance program for it so I don't have to manually fly it. So yes, the great thing about this is, it's not only a model, it's a PHYSICAL MODEL!!! And I can actually fly it, with precise parameters from the real Taeopodong-1 rocket!!! How cool is that
Here's launch! Hahaha yep, toasted astronaut...I guess it damaged the shuttle too.
40 seconds after launch, the pitchover starts.
Nice pitch of about 50 degrees...preparing for 1st stage burnout and separation.
1st stage separation (yep I tracked the 1st stage and it fell on Russian soil...thus if the launch azimuth was about 080 etc, then the 1st stage has the potential to fall on Japanese soil)
Following the 2nd/3rd stage stack...
My preprogrammed azimuth of 043 will let me pass over the west coast of the US... sinister smile.
2nd stage burnout and 3rd stage ignition...achieved orbit about 30 seconds after this screenshot.
I tried to deburn after passing Alaska, but I overshot the US west coast and ended up falling into Baja California (Mexican territory)...
...looks like I'm now at war with the Mehikanos!!! Andale andale AYEPAYEPA AIIIEEEEEE!!
-RODION
Last edited by rodsky; 03-17-2009 at 08:55 PM.
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