I don't know about the modern military, but in the 1960's when my dad was in the Air Force, it was pretty much a 9-5, 5 days a week, with a couple of weeks off in the summer for vacation. He was an NCO for a big chunk of his twenty years, so maybe rank hath it's privilegesI get the feeling that with Starfleet it's easier to get time off than it is any modern military. Obviously, they go months without the opportunity of shore leave - especially if they're on assignments lasting months or years - but I imagine they probably get off a day a week to unwind and destress from work. Especially if they're swapping duty rosters and going from, for example, a night shift to a day shift.
Years ago, I gave a somewhat simplified description of what it was like for me on one of the ships I served on, for those that are interested.
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/how-many-shifts-on-a-starship.131365/page-2#post-4497010
(And for those that will understand, for the most part, I was a fresh air snipe)
Hence all the evil admirals in TrekI don't care what you do, or how much you love doing it. If you don't get time to do something else (or do nothing at all), you either grow to hate what you're doing, or you go nuts, or both.
In the TNG era aboard the Enterprise, it was 8 hrs per shift in 3x shifts using Earth's 24 Hr/Day calender before Edward Jellico took command temporarilyDo we know how long a duty shift is as depicted n Star Trek?
True but then we've got Tom Paris pulling a "double shift" in certain episodes of Voyager (I think other characters mention it too). That's a 12-16 hour work day! Maybe Janeway uses shorter duty shifts?In the TNG era aboard the Enterprise, it was 8 hrs per shift in 3x shifts using Earth's 24 Hr/Day calender before Edward Jellico took command temporarily
After Edward Jellico took over, it was 6 hrs per shift in 4x shifts using Earth's 24 Hr/Day calender, Picard authorized that change to stay.
After Edward Jellico took over, it was 6 hrs per shift in 4x shifts using Earth's 24 Hr/Day calender, Picard authorized that change to stay.
Welcome to the squirrel-cage, K'Mpec. I'm guessing from the German-style quotation marks that you're either from Germany or Austria.
At any rate, good analysis.
I would also note that with a multi-species, multi-cultural crew, with differing mental needs for rest days, and differing cultural norms about when to take them, there's probably little or no trouble keeping enough people on duty to run the ship.
I do know about the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz.
At sea there are two 12 hour shifts for regular work shifts. In addition there may be a watch schedule. Sometimes the watch will coincide with the 12 hour work day in whole or in part. When deployed on a long cruise you might have a three to six day port call, then 20 to 30 days at sea. In port overseas there was three section duty. The carrier I was on never docked in port when deployed, instead we anchored just outside the port, ready to get underway. With 3-section duty, 1/3 of the crew stays aboard their duty day (24 hrs) to perform watch station duties. Those not on duty can go for Liberty when liberty call is announced on the 1MC. Enlisted ranks E-6 and below had to be back to Fleet Landing by midnight, E-7 through E-9 01:00, Officers and Warrant Officers 02:00.
My first six month scheduled Med Cruise had port calls. Then Iranian students took American Embassy staff hostage. We had been in the med for 6 months when that happened. The ship was sent from its final port call in Naples, Italy; five days and nights at 30 kts around Africa, to the Gulf of Oman Naval Zone of Operation (GONZO station). We were told we would be there for a month, but that was extended each month until we had been there for just over 5 months. There was a west coast carrier with us at GONZO, they would be relieved once a month by another west coast carrier. The Nimitz got holiday routine (flight operations secured for the day) every other Sunday, with a steel beach picnic.
We came back in late May to Norfolk VA and had to have a quick turn around in the Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, VA and then went on a two month deployment to the North Atlantic.
Some navy ships never or hardly every leave port, we barely stayed in port. If we weren't in the ship yard we would deploy at least every other month for two weeks or more for some type of training and flight operations.
We never got long breaks in between deployments. Nuclear aircraft carriers will get a couple of years straight in the shipyard for mid life refueling at 25 years. When I was aboard it was 22 years left before refueling.
I had a cousin in the Navy the same time that I was, stationed on a Gator freighter, that never left port in San Diego. He told me they tried to go on a Westpac cruise but had engine room troubles and had to be towed back to port.
I know there's leave that crewmembers accrue, but do they otherwise work on ship 7 days a week for 5 year missions? Surely you'd need days of just chillin' inbetween the dangerous away missions, crazy space phenomena and space battle repairs.
I didn't know you could escape; I thought that once you were a Nuke, you would glow in the dark forever.When I was in Reactor / RE Div I was a regular snipe. That was only for a year.
However, it’s how the functioning of a (space)ship’s crew is often portrayed in this genre that I find most reminiscent of life on the RV Kilo Moana, a united hive of activity where everyone on-board plays a skilled, discrete, and important role. On the Kilo Moana, this varies from navigation and engineering to the roles of the technicians, stewards and chefs, the ROV crew, and the scientists themselves.
Seriously though, why wouldn't they get days off? I mean, they're still humans that would require such resting days.
After Edward Jellico took over, it was 6 hrs per shift in 4x shifts using Earth's 24 Hr/Day calender, Picard authorized that change to stay.
One of the complaints which I used to have about ST was how safe the world it was set in. They had access to replicators, they could go to holosuites.
Would I be right in thinking that modern ships wouldn't require staff actually in the engine room full time, with the engineering crew working mainly from elsewhere on the ship? Because Star Trek's depiction of the engineering deck looks quite antiquated, like that of an old steamship, still common when TOS first aired.Class 7708-10 NPS Orlando, FL followed By NPTU D1G Ballston Spa, NY.
I was aboard AUG78-SEP82. Still had that new ship smell. The "potable" water had a distinct odor of JP5 though.
Started out in RT then when the ship was in the shipyard (after its second Med. Cruise) at Portsmouth I was moved to Fire Watch division, back to RT, then RE Division for about a year, and then transferred to Engineering Department. The Chief Engineer was in the process of creating a new Division called Boat Repair (BR) and he wanted me to be the LPO. The two work centers that were combined were EA07 from A Division and EE01 from E2 Division.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.