Ah! Got it. So any senior officers will listen/report to O'Brien while in Engineering, because he's the Chief Engineer. But once they're out of the Engineering department (e.g. on the bridge?), O'Brien has to report to them. That makes sense.DeadPoolX wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 4:02 amPosition is ALWAYS more important than rank. So if O'Brien is the chief engineer on DS9, that means higher-ranking officers (which, technically-speaking, is ALL of them) have to report to him and listen to him in his capacity as chief engineer. In other words, O'Brien still needs to call a lieutenant "sir," but that same lieutenant would still need to take orders in engineering from O'Brien.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 1:55 am DPX, I'm confused. It makes sense that a senior NCO has to take orders from a brand-new ensign, despite having more experience - it's the hierarchy. But then you say that officers who outrank O'Brien still have to report to him.
Here's another example: an officer whose rank is lieutenant commander, but is the captain of a ship (note: he or she would still be addressed as "captain" because that's their position, regardless of actual rank) does not have his or her authority overridden if a higher-ranking officer comes aboard.
Why? Because position takes precedence over rank.
Of course you do. I was just trying to understand them myself (and to ask for confirmation if I got them right).DeadPoolX wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 4:02 amI know how the ranks work in both the US Navy and US Army, Rath.Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 1:55 am Hmm. According to wikipedia, the difference is simple: vice-admiral has two stars, rear admirable has three, and full admiral has four. (Fleet Admiral has five, but as you said, no-one's held that rank since Nimitz).
It seems like the equivalent Army ranks (i.e. two, three, four and five stars) would be Major-Gen., Lieut-Gen., General and General of the Army. (However, it seems that Gen. of the Army was last held by Omar Bradley, and not conferred on anyone else since Bradley died in 1981).
Whoops! I was basing this on the wiki-article, but obviously I screwed up. *blush* Sorry.DeadPoolX wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 4:02 am My comment about the "admiral ranks not being clear" was in reference to Star Trek and more specifically, Starfleet. The reason those ranks aren't always clear in Star Trek is because rank is something that the writers and costume department sometimes screwed up.
BTW, you got the US Navy ranks wrong: Rear Admiral (lower-half) is one star, Rear Admiral (upper-half) is two stars, Vice Admiral is three stars, Admiral is four stars, and Fleet Admiral is five stars. In Commonwealth nations, the rank of Commodore is used instead of Rear Admiral (lower-half).
Well, that makes sense. Thank you.DeadPoolX wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 4:02 amThere's actually very little written about this, but from what I know, the ranks of General, Lieutenant General, and Major General were originally at some point (long before the US existed) known as "Captain General," "Lieutenant General," and "Sergeant Major General."Rath Darkblade wrote: ↑Sun Sep 18, 2022 1:55 am This is something that always bothered me: since a Major far outranks a Lieutenant, why does a Lieut-Gen. outrank a Major-Gen.? *confused* It seems to me, logically, that Major-General should be the higher rank. Any idea why it was reversed?
Somewhere along the line the "captain" part was dropped to make General, while the "sergeant" part was also dropped to form Major General, but the order of ranks never changed. Why did this happen? No idea, but since ranks (name and insignia) do change over time, I could easily imagine this happening and the the reasons for this occurring being lost to history.
As for the Starfleet writers/costume department sometimes screwing up -- let's be thankful they didn't get into the different types of sergeants/petty officers. I was trying to understand those, myself, but it's bewildering how many sergeant/petty officer ranks there are.