
I don't think it says so much about the size of the Navy, but more about the highly decentralized command structure....the head of the Navy is "usually a serving Admiral or Commodore". That would make for a pretty small navy!
Moderators: winston, another_commander
I don't think it says so much about the size of the Navy, but more about the highly decentralized command structure....the head of the Navy is "usually a serving Admiral or Commodore". That would make for a pretty small navy!
NiceYou would also not be a Gentleman, but that's another story.
So, in terms of career-Navy staff, each sector has tens/hundreds of Captains commanded by one senior Captain/Commodore, with one Commodore lording over it all? That's crazy - too many mid-level chiefs, no big chiefs and no indians! Unless there are only a few Captains, which would suggest (to me) a ridiculously tiny organisation. In my future fiction (when I get round to it) I'm certainly going to make use of more ranks, above and below!I don't think it says so much about the size of the Navy, but more about the highly decentralized command structure....the head of the Navy is "usually a serving Admiral or Commodore". That would make for a pretty small navy!
Or a modern day submarine Commanding Officer (hunter killer subs) who has far greater freedom in comparison to surface vessel C.O's who are in almost constant contact with higher command.Roberto wrote:... could have considerable freedom of action within their sector (just as a Royal Navy Captain in the 18th/early 19th century ...
I assumed the reason for this rank was so that when they are called into action they are squadroned with and given orders by a de facto Captain from the Regular Navy.
Commodores supposedly command squadrons or small fleets while larger fleets up to entire battle groups or sector bases require a Rear Admiral; in both cases their duties are on the operational level (opposed to, for instance, a battleship's Captain who's not a flag officer and whose concerns are mainly tactical). It's the full Admirals that are the Commanders-in-Chief responsable for the overall strategic decisions.matt634 wrote:I picture it more like this:
There are tens/hundreds of captains each serving under a Carrier Group/Fleet "Commander" who is usually a ranking Commodore/Vice Admiral/Rear Admiral/Admiral. All of the Carrier Group/Fleet "Commanders" are subordinate to the Sector "Commander" who was himself some sort of Commodore or Admiral before being promoted to the position of SecCom. The Commander-in-Chief, himself a former Sector Commander in most cases, and therefore a ranking Commodore/Admiral, has ultimate authority but does not micromanage the war. I would think the Commander-in-Chief's executive office would have to be quite large, staffed with hundreds of officers, to oversee the war effort.
Sorry, you made that too top-heavy, and completely skipped the enlisted and the WO/NCOs...Roberto wrote:Navy Commander-in-Chief
Admiral
Commodore
Captain
Commander
Lt Commander
Lieutenant
2nd Lieutenant
Ensign
Recruit
A SecCom would most likely be a Captain or (in a major sector) a Commodore. Having only one "non-commissioned" rank simplifies things and suggests a Navy that's fairly big, but not huge.
Yes - it's a deliberate simplification. While I think the Navy needs a fair few ranks to have a reasonable command structure, I don't think it needs that many. And for me, terms such as Petty Officer, Warrant Officer or Midshipman don't fit very well with the whole spaceship thing. *EDIT* Also - nothing against NCOs! - the whole notion of a "commission" which some officers have and some don't seems kind of superfluous/anachronistic for a 31st-century galactic defence force.Sorry, you made that too top-heavy, and completely skipped the enlisted and the WO/NCOs...
I agree that there is some kind of planning and co-ordination needed, while the SecComs maintain a certain degree of independence. But couldn't that be a planning and co-ordination between the SecComs? A conference of the SecCom-commanders under the Commander in Chief (there is surely a military name for this kind of body, but I of course don't know it), that decides on where to concentrate the forces and so on? Yes, there are indeed fluctuations on a galactic level, and in my opinion that's exactly what all the information about the Galactic Navy from the Wiki is all about. My main objective against Matt's OXP is that he fixes the sectors in each galaxy and ties each one to a station orbiting a certain planet. I still think this contradicts the Wiki, according to which the SecComs are mobile, and are always found where the war with the Thargoids is hottest. In other words: According to the wiki-perception of the Navy there are no permanent sectors in any of the galaxies, but it all fluctuates in a volatile war-situation.Roberto wrote:Btw, I think the idea of a completely decentralised organisation is a bit silly too - while each SecCom, being "on the spot", could have considerable freedom of action within their sector (just as a Royal Navy Captain in the 18th/early 19th century had almost limitless power over his ship's company), *some* centralised resource management/strategic planning is surely to be expected. I doubt the Thargoids would attack in a dumb, uncoordinated fashion, or fail to vary the deployment of their forces across the various galaxies/Navy sectors - there'd be "campaigns", or at the least, fluctuations. For the Navy not to respond to these/plan their own manoeuvres on a "galactic" level (nor to take a "galactic" view on the issues of recruitment, repairs and ship production) would indicate an extreme lack of intelligence within the command structure, and within GalCop as a whole. I don't buy it.
Code: Select all
None Outsider
Private Serf
Corporal Master
Sergeant Sir
Sgt-Major Squire
Major Lord
Colonel Baron
Lieutenant Viscount
Lt. Commander Count
Captain Earl
Commodore Marquis
Rear Admiral Duke
Admiral Prince
So let me get this straight. FE:2 and FFE had a ranking system for the Feds that borrowed half from army (or the marines) and half from navy ranks.Cmdr. Maegil wrote:I'd realy like to know what was on Braben's head when he bollixed the rank tables like this... Oh, well!