As noted, modern military does it all the time.What isn't realistic is the two different ways of denoting rank.
As noted, modern military does it all the time.What isn't realistic is the two different ways of denoting rank.
It's still three stripes. How could it be be mistaken for a Lt. Commander's two stripes?I always like the captain's braid on the TOS uniforms: the braid pattern, and the fact that the middle strip was broken.
They tried to bring the system back to the JJ movies, but they screwed it all up. They made the stripes silver, straight, untextured, and solid. Kirk doesn't look like a captain anymore, not in the TOS style- now he just looks like a lieutenant commander.![]()
If we're talking rank stripes, TOS wasn't even consistent with its own self:
- "The Cage": One stripe for officers (ANY officer), no stripe for anyone else.
- WNMHGB: Two stripes for captain; one stripe for all other officers; etc.
And then there's the TOS system.
So you can't blame other shows for not following TOS' rules, when it didn't follow its OWN.
It's still three stripes. How could it be be mistaken for a Lt. Commander's two stripes?
Three stripes in the US Navy isn't a Captain either. Starfleet ranks are Starfleet ranks. Why look at them and see "US Navy"?Sorry, I meant like a LCDR in a contemporary Navy, not Trek. My point being is that the JJ-verse solid stripes don't look like the braid used to, plus the 'half-stripes' are just skinny stripes instead of broken ones.
I'm aware of what the ranks look like.Also, two solid stripes isn't LCDR in Trek- that's a full commander. If you look at Scotty's sleeves in TOS, you'll see one solid stripe and one broken stripe, or the JJ-equivalent of one and a half stripes. That's a LCDR. In TOS, Spock wore full commander stripes as 'executive science officer', but I think I might recall a place or two where his service rank was listed as LCDR, while at other times he is called 'Commander Spock.' Of course, referring to a LCDR as just 'commander' is a common practice in most western navies, and just adds to the fun confusion!!
The Pip ranks are based off US Navy ranks however, sort of. If you consider the solid pips being the thick stripes and the black pips representing the thin stripes.
The number of pips lines up as well.
The DSC designers missed a trick by not using the TOS-pattern insignia with the wavy stripes and broken half-stripes. It would also have helped to differentiate the DSC uniforms from those in the JJ-verse.
I don't recall that the pilots actually did that. I recall only one thickness of solid stripe. Nor was the rank depiction in either pilot really in alignment with the system in the series. Production-wise, it was still a work in progress.As I recall, the TOS pilots used solid stripes in different thicknesses instead of the braids and broken half ones.
Don’t fleet captains command multiple ships though?
From EAS:I don't recall that the pilots actually did that. I recall only one thickness of solid stripe. Nor was the rank depiction in either pilot really in alignment with the system in the series. Production-wise, it was still a work in progress.
However, varying the thickness to create a system parallel to the final TOS series braids, where the thick stripe represents the solid braid and the thin stripe represents the broken braid, is a natural retcon.
I suspect this is where ST'09's treatment of ranks as positions comes from. The 2013 videogame even has McCoy say to Kirk "I took all the same [academy] classes you did... hell, I even graduated"From EAS:
According to Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, Roddenberry’s original idea for the organization of the USS Enterprise was that the ship would be based on a merchant marine type organization with a Captain and various mates overseeing a large crew. In the pilot episode "The Cage", the only ranks spoken of were Captain, Lieutenant, Chief and Crewman. All officers wore a single rank stripe and, according to Roddenberry, everyone aboard the Enterprise was a qualified astronaut making rank titles a formality since all crewmembers basically had the same type of training.
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