![]() Word Passed: Secure all loose gear about the deck. Word Passed: On signal the time will be 14 hours, 37 minutes. SOUND: ENGINES REV UP, THEN COME TO STOP. Word Passed: Start engines.Īnnouncer: Plane captains arc now checking engines. Word Passed: Secure all loose gear about the flight deck. See the inside back cover of the album for Flight Deck Procedure, Plan of the Day, and Routine Calls and Commands.Īnnouncer: Pauses between commands in this recording are not necessarily the same as those in actual procedure. Notice that the word passed gigs the approximate location of the man overboard.Īssembly is sometimes sounded after the Man Overboard call so the missing man may he identified. The command to be delivered would depend on whether or not life jackets, emergency rations, etc., should be provided under the circumstances. This emergency order, calling all hands to action, includes either the word, "Provide," or the phrase, "Do not provide." Word Passed: All hands stand by to abandon ship. Provide.Įxplanation: (not part of the call) When assigned equipment is not to be provided, the word passed in the Abandon Ship call is changed accordingly to sound this way. It is never sounded in routine calls.Įxplanation: (not part of the call) In the Abandon Ship call, when assigned equipment is to be provided, the word passed is as follows: The General Alarm is optional in this call, and also in all other emergency calls. Note that when the word is passed the location of the collision is included. All repair parties man your stations.Ĭollision is the only call in which the Ship's Siren is blown. This call is given to send a rescue squad to assist at the site of an accident-afloat or ashore-away from the home ship. Torpedo Defense, one of the emergency calls and commands, contains the same bugle call as the one used in Air Defense (#2).Īt this call those hands involved in torpedo defense man their Stations. Word Passed: Man all torpedo defense stations. Two blasts following the bugle call, and two rings following the bell ringing would mean that the fire is located aft in the ship. That one blast following the bugle call, and that one ring following the bell ringing both tell you the fire is located forward in the ship. ![]() Word Passed: Man all flight quarters stations.Īll men connected with the aviation divisions and squadrons respond to this call to Flight Quarters.įlight Quarters is one of the emergency calls. The bugle call for Air Defense, and for Torpedo Defense (#5), is the same call. Word Passed: Man all air defense stations.Īir Defense is not an "all hands" drill and a shorter pipe call, "Word To Be Passed," establishes this fact at the very beginning. Then the word is passed at once to reach all persons within hearing. Notice that it begins with an "all hands" call on the Pipe. It also demonstrates how a complete call is put together, and explains why adjustments in the make-up of calls and commands are sometimes made in the Operational Navy. This first side, "Introduction," helps you get acquainted with the different sounds to be heard later in the album. SHIPBOARD CALLS AND COMMANDS NP11334RA-11338RB
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