Going back to the first post:
Midshipman is the proper term for a cadet at Navy Academy. In Star Trek, it seems to be pretty much interchangeable.
There's no such rank as "Sub-lieutenant", at least not that I can ever recall seeing in Star Trek. Maybe it's in the Romulan space navy, like they have Sub-commander.
Officers
O1 = Ensign
O2 = Lieutenant - Junior Grade
O3 = Lieutenant
O4 = Lieutenant Commander
O5 = Commander
O6 = Captain
O7 = Commodore (modern US Navy == Rear Admiral - Lower Half)
O8 = Rear Admiral
O9 = Vice Admiral
O10 = Admiral
O11 = Fleet Admiral
Enlisted personnel
E1 = Crewman Recruit
E2 = Crewman
E3 = Crewman First Class
E4 = Petty Officer Third Class
E5 = Petty Officer Second Class
E6 = Petty Officer First Class
E7 = Chief Petty Officer
E8 = Senior Chief Petty Officer
E9 = Master Chief Petty Officer
Also: Command Master Chief Petty Officer, Fleet Master Chief Petty Officer, and Master Chief Petty Officer Of Star Fleet
Titles such as Yeoman, Boatswain's Mate, Gunner's Mate, etc., are job titles, or "ratings", and not a rank. A YN2 is a Yeoman Second Class, an admin clerk with the rank of E5 = Petty Officer Second Class. (The current Secretary of the Navy wants to, over the objections of the Navy rank and file including upper-level enlisted leadership, eliminate all rating titles and associated specialized rank insignia because they're not "gender neutral". I can not repeat here what my wife had to say about that.)
I don't ever recall seeing any Warrant Officers in Star Trek, but in the modern US Army they have WO1 = Warrant Officer, CW2 to CW4 = Chief Warrant Officer, and MW5 = Master Warrant Officer. Warrant Officers typically hold technical jobs, e.g., pilot, signal corps, etc., and rarely hold a command position. As previously noted, Warrant Officers fall between Enlisted and Officers.
I seem to recall the US Navy has phasing out Warrant Officers as the last ones that hold that rank retire.
I seem to recall the US Navy has phasing out Warrant Officers as the last ones that hold that rank retire.
Re: Warrant Officers. The US currently (IFAIK) doesn't have any Warrant Officers, but with the exception of the AF maintains varing numbers of the Chief Warrant Officer ranks. This IIRC is to do with the payroll implications for personnel transitioning from NCO ranks (depending on their NCO rank, they would have been paid less for more responsiblity)
The US Navy has (or at least had) a program for Limited Duty Officers where selected PO1s and CPOs would be promoted to junior officers to fill holes in the ranks.
Also, there is a "Fleet Admiral" in TNG era parlance, but that title apparently isn't tied to any specific rank - it is commonly associated with the three-pip rank of Vice Admiral. The five-pip Admiral rank does not make an appearance in the TNG era. A rank higher than Admiral does appear in the TOS movies, but is not given a formal name; people wearing this rank pin hold positions such as "the CinC" or "Commander, Starfleet". One might surmise Starfleet does have a name for this rank, and further that it won't be Admiral of the Fleet as this would cause confusion with the job title. Grand Admiral, perhaps?
Timo Saloniemi
- Perhaps a Cadet is a Midshipman when on a training cruise?
- Perhaps a Midshipman is a special grade of Cadet, coming after Freshman?
- Perhaps Midshipman is a special job for a Cadet, close to the original in the sense of, say, mediating between instructors/officers and "common" Cadets?
I would think Commodore and Fleet Captain would be the same relative position on the rank chart, with one still being a Line Officer while the other was a Flag Officer. Their scale would be the same, with different tasks. One might imagine a Fleet Captain's Five Pips would have seniority a lot of the time over many Commodores and Rear Admirals, but a two Boxed Pip Rear Admiral would likely outrank a Fleet Captain, as oppose to the one Boxed Pip Commodore/Rear Admirals.
Speaking of odd ranks, just what equivalent was Sloan's four Pips with a bar under it suppose to be of someone in Starfleet? It must have a functional rank, as it wasn't questioned at all.
I've always favored the idea that fleet captains in TOS had three full stripes as their insignia.I would think Commodore and Fleet Captain would be the same relative position on the rank chart, with one still being a Line Officer while the other was a Flag Officer. Their scale would be the same, with different tasks.
I actually have that post bookmarked on my computer. It was a big help in coming up with realistic career trajectories for my ST chronology.Something I wrote on another discussion board back in 2011:
A few weeks ago, I was reading stuff on FanFic dot com. It annoys me when I read a fiction story and see "At age 28, he was the youngest Captain ever." Go to the next story, and the main character ther was the youngest at age 27. Two stories later, someone else made their character a Captain at 26. I'm waiting to see the story in which teen-agers are commanding starships. {sigh}
Using real-world numbers, one cannot go to Academy or West Point until age 17. It takes four years to graduate ... none of this "Four years? I'll do it in three!" So an officer can be a 2Lt / Ensign at age 21. It takes two years to make 1Lt / LT-jg and another two for Capt / LT. That's pretty much set in stone.
Now, to move up to Major / LtCmdr and then to LtCol / Cmdr and again to COL / CAPT, the law requires three years time in grade for each promotion. Of course, no one is ever promoted at the minimum time, but let's say somehow someone does. They will be 17+4+2+2+3+3+3 = 34 years old when they make O-6 Captain.
In theory, you can have a child prodigy get his degree by age 18 and then get a direct commission via OTS / OCS. That shaves off three years, and it is legal to promote from 2LT to 1LT in 18 months vice 24 (I've never seen it happen). Ergo, the absolute youngest a person in the modern-day US military can theoretically make O-6 is age 30-1/2 years.
Hope that helps the conversation here.......
I've always favored the idea that fleet captains in TOS had three full stripes as their insignia.
Another contender for that could be "vice-captain," a rank used in a couple of other fictional navies for an officer below a captain but above a commander.Three pips and one black pip = The seldom heard of rank of senior commander (Latvia) or Yarbay (Turkey) which is a short term preparation rank to get the officer ready to take command of a larger ship. If it was Starfleet, it would be the rank Riker would be promoted to before taking command of a Galaxy-class starship (or if it is of similar size and prestige, the Titan).
As I recall, the term "branch admiral" was also used once on TNG but with no implication whether this was a distinct admiralty rank/position.
Well, there was an officer named Branch in ST:TMP, but he wasn't of flag rank.
No, no "branch admirals" mentioned in dialogue. Scripts may be a different matter, but scripts don't matter (or else the Outrageous Okona would really have an "infectious" laughter bubbling from his "ruggedly handsome" lips).
That a rank named Fleet Captain should exist in Starfleet is far from said: the single episode with such dialogue ("The Menagerie"; there is no mention of Fleet Captain in "Whom Gods Destroy") is ambiguous on the issue. But if it does, it might well be three full braid, thus one step above Kirk's 1-½-1 "Junior Captain" rank - and we just miss out on Junior Captains or Vice Captains in later Trek.
Timo Saloniemi
Doesn't make sense to have a Chief Petty Officer if you don't have Petty Officers.........
At age 17, Wesley Crusher was given a uniform and the rank of Ensign before entering the Academy. Apparently a Captain can do that in the oh so civilized 24th Century. In the Yesterday's Enterprise alternate timeline he's also an Ensign and fighting in a war.I roll my eyes at Ensign Chekov 17 years old in Starfleet, even if one is in the 'Starfleet is not military' camp what is any civilised organisation doing sending a child into combat? Do we expect the armed forces, coast guard or NASA to take 13 year olds?
At age 17, Wesley Crusher was given a uniform and the rank of Ensign before entering the Academy. Apparently a Captain can do that in the oh so civilized 24th Century. In the Yesterday's Enterprise alternate timeline he's also an Ensign and fighting in a war.
And it makes sense that Yesterday's Wesley has his commission, as that version of Starfleet has taken massive losses and of course they'd need all the qualified people they could get.
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