Pages in category "Ship compartments" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. Aft of the CPO's quarters and head is Officer's Country.
This passageway contains the eight staterooms where the KIDD's officers lived, two or three to a compartment, depending upon seniority. Politely called "staterooms," these cabins functioned as sleeping quarters, lounges, and offices. Based on appearances, the officers had much better living arrangements than the men one deck.
These four-compartment berthing quarters provide a glimpse into the living environment afforded to the officers' rank. Bunked one or two to a room, their accommodations included wardrobes, a sink, a desk, and more comfortable beds than the standard enlisted bunks. Like college dormitories, the men would personalize their bunks with pictures from home, artwork, and memorabilia from their.
Officer staterooms range from a cramped 3 man stateroom to a palatial Admirals suite. It depends on the ranks and the ship. On a destroyer, officer staterooms are generally the size of a walk-in closet but can range from 3 man rooms to single rooms.
On a carrier or amphib, rooms tend to be 2 man staterooms or one man staterooms for LCDRs or above. The last compartment on the starboard side belonged to the Executive Officer or XO. He was the second in command aboard the ship.
The XO reported directly to the Commanding Officer and was responsible for all administrative duties, as well as keeping the ship running smoothly. Officer's stateroom aboard USS DURIK DE. I've been looking at how ships are designed lately, specifically how the living and working spaces are designed and laid out.
I used to think a ship is just a giant floating steel box can where everything's crammed in, but there's so much more to it to make living conditions better for mariners, Human Factors in Design So, here's the deal. Naval architects have to remember that ships. Navy ship stores typically use a "Navy Cash Card".
Navy Cash Cards are basically shipboard debit cards issued by the Navy to avoid having to keep physical cash on ships. All navy ships have a signal bridge. To the intelligence officer or specialist, this is the area where sighting teams are called to photograph items of interest such as foreign warships, merchantmen, or aircraft.
8-12 Student Notes: Letter Type of Compartment Examples A Stowage spaces Store and issue rooms; refrigerated compartments AA Cargo holds Cargo holds and cargo refrigerated compartments C Control centers for ship and fire-control operations (normally manned) CIC; plotting rooms; communications centers; pilothouse; electronic equipment operating. MIL-HDBK-2150, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE HANDBOOK: SHIP COMPARTMENT NOMENCLATURE AND SPACE CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (21 JAN 1999) [SUPERSEDING MIL-STD-2150A]., The purpose of this handbook is to establish a uniform system for recording and identifying the space allocated in Navy ships and to provide an alphabetical listing of all approved ship compartment titles. The Space Classification System.