Difference between revisions of "Executive officer"

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* divvies the booty
 
* divvies the booty
  
Often, especially on small ships, the CO will also be responsible for [[Sea battle]], and may take on other tasks as well, such as doing a duty station at the same time or loading the guns. On larger ships, and especially during [[blockade]]s, you may have a CO and a dedicated battle navver.  
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Often, especially on small ships, the CO will also be responsible for [[sea battle]], and may take on other tasks as well, such as doing a duty station at the same time or loading the guns. On larger ships, and especially during [[blockade]]s, you may have a CO and a dedicated battle navver.  
  
 
The CO can either be the [[officer]] who owns the ship, or any [[fleet officer]] or above.
 
The CO can either be the [[officer]] who owns the ship, or any [[fleet officer]] or above.

Revision as of 05:00, 1 August 2005

There is no official rank of commanding officer within a crew, and no official duty station or indicator to show who is in charge. However, it is a common convention within the YPP Community for each voyage on the high seas to have a designated commanding officer (CO) - sometimes referred to as the "officer in charge" (OIC) - for that voyage.

Sometimes one mate will set out on a voyage and run into Real Life troubles, and be forced to log out quickly or otherwise become distracted. Having a commanding officer can avoid the complete failure of a voyage in such circumstances. (If you have ever found yourself on a ship at sea and there is nobody capable of taking charge of the ship aboard, you can fully appreciate why it is a good idea to give someone that job).

The commanding officer has no official responsibilities, and their exact form differs from crew to crew, but the basics are that the CO:

  • assigns crewmates to stations (such as gunnery and navigation)
  • asks or orders mates to stations if he or she thinks people are working on the wrong station
  • handles the posting of jobber invitations
  • decides who to hire and who to plank
  • stays until the end of the trip
  • divvies the booty

Often, especially on small ships, the CO will also be responsible for sea battle, and may take on other tasks as well, such as doing a duty station at the same time or loading the guns. On larger ships, and especially during blockades, you may have a CO and a dedicated battle navver.

The CO can either be the officer who owns the ship, or any fleet officer or above.