Difference between revisions of "Fleet Communication Protocols"

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(Current Voidcraft Types in Use)
(See Also)
 
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== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==
* [[PUV James Keeling]]
 
* [[GU-44 Ochthera]]
 
* [[U-90 Sentinel]]
 
* [[Planetary Union Fleet]]
 
 
* [[Fleet Contact Management System (CMS)]]
 
* [[Fleet Contact Management System (CMS)]]
  

Latest revision as of 09:48, 24 April 2025

Fleet Communication Protocols are the standardized naming and transmission procedures used by the Planetary Union Fleet in The Crypt series. These protocols help ensure clarity and coordination during ship-to-ship, fighter, and boarding operations — particularly in dense battlespaces or missions involving multiple capital vessels, voidcraft, and support teams.

Voidcraft Communications

Fleet voidcraft such as the GU-44 Ochthera and U-90 Sentinel follow a standardized comms protocol based on class, origin, and mission type.

Individual Operation Naming Convention

Used when voidcraft operate independently from a single capital ship or base.

  • Format: <class> + <local number>
  • Example: Crawler One (the first Ochthera assigned to the PUV Keeling)

Group Operation Naming Convention

Used when voidcraft operate in task groups or multi-ship operations.

  • Format: <mothership/base short code> + <class> + <local number>
  • Example: Crawler Kilo-Echo-One
    • "Kilo-Echo" is the short code for the PUV Keeling

Mission-Based Suffixes

Suffixes indicate a voidcraft’s specific mission role in complex engagements. These are only used when multiple craft of the same class are operating with differing assignments.

  • Example: Sentinel Alpha-Kilo-Three Razor
  • Format: <base code> + <class> + <number> + <suffix>
  • Example breakdown:
    • Sentinel: Class name (U-90 Interceptor)
    • Alpha-Kilo: Mothership short code for the PUV Akathaso
    • Three: Local assignment number
    • Razor: Mission suffix indicating deep penetration

Mission Suffix Key

These suffixes are only used in engagements with high craft volume or mixed-mission sorties.

  • Noise — Electronic warfare
  • Carton — Troop transport and assault
  • Dump — Mine laying
  • Needle — Boarding troop insertion
  • Blast — Counter-air operations
  • Jolly — Search and rescue
  • Razor — Deep penetration strike
  • Shield — Counter-boarding or defensive intercept

Current Voidcraft Types in Use

Short Code Assignment

Fleet comms assign each ship or base a two-letter short code for quick tactical communication.

  • Example: Kilo-Echo = PUV Keeling
  • Example: Alpha-Kilo = PUV Akathaso
  • These short codes appear in callouts, mission logs, and tactical broadcast ID

Use of Protocols

  • All comms — including verbal, broadcast, and text logs — use this format.
  • Mission suffixes are only included when tactically necessary (e.g., an active carrier group using multiple voidcraft types with distinct objectives).
  • Smaller deployments, like the PUV Keeling with only two voidcraft, often omit suffixes for brevity.

See Also