Ganidirsii O'Flynn
SOC-12
I've found that instead of using the Air Force manning system, that the Navy works better in a Traveller sense. The AF's tend to be officer-heavy at the 'sharp end of the stick' while the Naval system provides a more realistic sense of spaceborne power projection. I'd encourage you to look at the Destroyer-and-smaller naval ship manning tables from WWII. For example, during the Battle of Leyte Gulf in the Phillipines a flotilla of destroyer escorts (that is, too-small-to-be-a-destroyer) fought an action that saved the beachhead against a VASTLY superior Imp. Japanese Navy force. That flotilla (radio callsign Taffy-3) was commanded by a mere Commander. This is why I quoted a PT Boat (or a MTB in British parlance) as a good manning table for your Type T patrol 'cruiser'.
Naval units depend on their Chiefs to get the technical aspects of the job done AND to provide leadership, training, and a role-model to swabbies in the preassure-cooker environment of a ship at sea, whereas in an Air Force environment senior NCOs are really just highly skilled wrench-turners. Now before any of you zoomies out there get ticked off at an old tread-head, I am talking about combat leadership. Since the AF's combat units are officer-heavy, they don't expect a Technical Sargeant to be a platoon sargeant, whereas the Navy DOES expect a Chief to keep his men fighting a fire aboard even while the ship is taking hits.
Also consider that, like the US Navy and Marines, the RAF's Bomber Command often used Sargeants (or petty officers) as navigators and and Fighter Command used sargeants as fighter pilots thoughout the WWII.
Naval units depend on their Chiefs to get the technical aspects of the job done AND to provide leadership, training, and a role-model to swabbies in the preassure-cooker environment of a ship at sea, whereas in an Air Force environment senior NCOs are really just highly skilled wrench-turners. Now before any of you zoomies out there get ticked off at an old tread-head, I am talking about combat leadership. Since the AF's combat units are officer-heavy, they don't expect a Technical Sargeant to be a platoon sargeant, whereas the Navy DOES expect a Chief to keep his men fighting a fire aboard even while the ship is taking hits.
Also consider that, like the US Navy and Marines, the RAF's Bomber Command often used Sargeants (or petty officers) as navigators and and Fighter Command used sargeants as fighter pilots thoughout the WWII.