|
Snowdens Secret posted:Note that it's not going to a surface ship-type business day schedule (which would be a disaster) but instead stretches the existing six-hour shifts to eight. Which makes me wonder how meals are handled. But then it mentions "(they) structured shifts for officers in a way that allowed all of them to be awake and work together for part of each day." Because if there's one thing sub officers complain about it's that they don't see enough of each other. Here here! Cooks would make more money spending no money on midrats.... But as a NAV-ET, I could imagine that spending my time Pt/St as NavSup would be made even more miserable with long shifts like that. Not to mention, if you have a watch like Fathometer that is often augmented by offgoing and oncoming watchstanders, that is now 12 hours of continuous watch.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 04:38 |
|
|
# ? May 16, 2024 18:49 |
|
Most of my at sea time was doing 12 or 9 hour watches due to bad manning. gently caress that poo poo and anyone who thinks it's a good idea.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 11:33 |
|
ded posted:gently caress that poo poo and anyone who thinks it's a good idea. The schedule change or submarines in general?
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 12:00 |
|
We just did 8 hour watches for 4 months and it was fantastic for everyone that wasn't a daywalker or an electrician.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 13:23 |
|
Cerekk posted:We just did 8 hour watches for 4 months and it was fantastic for everyone that wasn't a daywalker or an electrician. I actually just brought that up to my old Eng who is in PXO right now. I assume turnover and dinner are at 1930.... how are you going to burn a flick if you cannot start until 2100.... The other thing, that bones one watch section with the midnight routine every night. Imagine trying to find offgoing JO's to rig for dive more than half way into their offgoing...
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 13:34 |
|
Schlabbalabba posted:I actually just brought that up to my old Eng who is in PXO right now. I assume turnover and dinner are at 1930.... how are you going to burn a flick if you cannot start until 2100.... #conerproblems
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 14:04 |
|
genderstomper58 posted:#conerproblems #daywalkerproblems I was a rack guy. I do my head call as early as I can get away with, shower, and hit the rack. Beauty of QMOW is that I had the laptop to get all of my work done and write my email home while on watch...
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 14:44 |
|
Schlabbalabba posted:I actually just brought that up to my old Eng who is in PXO right now. I assume turnover and dinner are at 1930.... how are you going to burn a flick if you cannot start until 2100.... There's a few different ways boats have been doing it if you read the lessons learned messages, but we had breakfast 0700-0800, lunch 1500-1600, dinner 2300-2400 plus PBJ/soup breaks halfway through the day and swing watches when the offgoing guys give head/snack breaks to the on watch guys. Swing watch was protected sleep for midwatch guys, midwatch was protected sleep for everybody else. It worked OK most of the time. Midwatch guys usually get boned with 8 hours straight without a break (especially guys like the SRO that can't get up and walk around/use the head on watch). Day shift guys do all the maintenance on the evening shift (E-div gets boned because they have too much maintenance to fit it all in). Every Sunday we did 6 hour watches and everybody shifted back a section so you only had the midwatch for a week at a time. Officers did rig for dive/breaks/etc in-section. All in all I'd rather do it this way than go back. Even if I was perma-midwatch it would still be better than 6-and-12s.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 20:21 |
|
Cerekk posted:There's a few different ways boats have been doing it if you read the lessons learned messages, but we had breakfast 0700-0800, lunch 1500-1600, dinner 2300-2400 plus PBJ/soup breaks halfway through the day and swing watches when the offgoing guys give head/snack breaks to the on watch guys. Swing watch was protected sleep for midwatch guys, midwatch was protected sleep for everybody else. It worked OK most of the time. Midwatch guys usually get boned with 8 hours straight without a break (especially guys like the SRO that can't get up and walk around/use the head on watch). Day shift guys do all the maintenance on the evening shift (E-div gets boned because they have too much maintenance to fit it all in). Every Sunday we did 6 hour watches and everybody shifted back a section so you only had the midwatch for a week at a time. Officers did rig for dive/breaks/etc in-section. All in all I'd rather do it this way than go back. Even if I was perma-midwatch it would still be better than 6-and-12s. I'm not sure why you're mentioning the SRO unless you were doing this in-port. If you mean the RO, their ability to get up and walk around is a function of how many guys are qual'ed, not the schedule. I'm also not seeing any advantage of doing this over 6 and 12s, once you start rolling in multiple drill days / field day / division and department training etc - it just seems like one watchsection would get unmercifully pounded for a whole week instead of the usual Russian roulette. Vulcan Death Watches are still going to be a 12-14 hour day and it seems like they'd jank up the rotation even worse than usual. That was always the problem with sub scheduling, not the shift lengths; it works fine if you assume the "watch-maintain/train-sleep" three-shift rotation holds, but it doesn't - and the idea of marking off 16 hours a day for 'protected sleep' would've gone right out the window. And you still have problems with port/starboard, not enough guys qualed, bulked up watches for tracking parties or fatho, weapons handling etc etc etc etc. I'm also not seeing how kickers work but that's a much more minor concern. Keep in mind I came from a boat that believed crew fatigue was a myth dispelled with enough coffee, and crew exhaustion was considered a primary factor in them tearing the bottom out of a gator freighter and nearly losing the ship. I do know that for my division there's been certain changes (let's not go into these) that have greatly reduced underway maintenance and paperwork and those probably improved quality of life quite a bit.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 21:36 |
|
Schlabbalabba posted:The schedule change or submarines in general? The schedule change. 6/6/6 life is so much more easy than doing 9s or 12s.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 22:00 |
|
If I had to stand 8 hours of lower level as a nub, somebody would have died a violent death. Probably me. The best rotation I had was as the evening watch/drill monitor. I stood watch from 18-24 and did drills in the morning. Of course, six months of ORSE workup loving blew.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 23:04 |
|
Snowdens Secret posted:I'm not sure why you're mentioning the SRO unless you were doing this in-port. If you mean the RO, their ability to get up and walk around is a function of how many guys are qual'ed, not the schedule. yeah I meant RO. It's the same for any watch that can't really leave. But getting stuck on an 8 hour midwatch with no break is really the only downside. All the things you're talking about like drills and training and and weapons handling happen during all-awake time (8-16) so everybody still gets their protected sleep. The midwatch guys get it the worst because with prewatch tours their protected sleep is more like 16-22 but 6 hours uninterrupted is still better than you'd ever do on a 6-and-12 rotation. I didn't think it'd work either before we did it, but it works fine. My quantity and quality of sleep both went up and my quality of life increased astronomically. As a JO I was better rested than I was as an enlisted coner which is astonishing, really.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 23:23 |
|
I don't see message traffic much anymore... I have a SIPR for movements and that's it. Over here with the hovering navy, I'm pretty out of the loop
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 23:26 |
|
Anybody on the Annapolis? I called the detailer today for orders and picked that fine boat. No guarantee I'll get it yet, but just trying to feel out the crew, atmosphere, etc.
|
# ? Apr 21, 2014 23:44 |
|
itsrobbiej posted:Anybody on the Annapolis? I called the detailer today for orders and picked that fine boat. No guarantee I'll get it yet, but just trying to feel out the crew, atmosphere, etc. A year ago it sucked, but that don't mean poo poo.... O-gang or enlisted?
|
# ? Apr 22, 2014 01:55 |
|
I'm sure you'll have plenty of chances to 'feel out the crew' on the Anal Palace. (It used to be one of the happier boats on the waterfront, but that's a low bar, and that was 10+ years ago, although that sort of attitude carries longer than you'd think.)
|
# ? Apr 22, 2014 01:58 |
|
A couple years ago.... we were sharing a pier with them and I watched them lower the radar on a dude's head.... he was fine... That same in-port I saw them open a main ballast tank vent in port.... A-Gang, who was on the pier having a pow-wow, sprinted towards the boat.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2014 02:03 |
|
Enlisted...nuke . Buddy of mine said he was always hearing bad stuff about the atmosphere and stuff there, while in port. I figure it's just going to be something I have to figure out and no matter if I get a rough boat or a totally awesome boat, I don't know enough about it to realize the difference.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2014 09:49 |
|
It's a boat. Terrible things are to be expected.
|
# ? Apr 22, 2014 11:59 |
|
|
# ? May 16, 2024 18:49 |
|
Schlabbalabba posted:It's a boat. Terrible things are to be expected. Yep. The climate can change really quickly depending on the most mundane things, but the CO/COB have big impacts. Always a crap shoot. IMHO, choose based on other things; schedule, homeport, etc. Sacrilage fucked around with this message at 19:33 on May 4, 2014 |
# ? May 4, 2014 19:30 |