Guidelines

What is a Navy APL?

What is a Navy APL?

The APL is a stand alone allowance document that identifies a system or equipment and the repair spares, Maintenance Assistance Modules (MAMs), and special tools required for operation and maintenance, both corrective and preventive, for the system or equipment.

What are Navy barracks called?

The United States Navy classes them as either Auxiliary Personnel Barracks (APB) or Auxiliary Personnel Lighter (aka barge) (APL).

What is a barge in the Navy?

APLs are used by the Navy to house crewmembers when ships are in port for availabilities and Inter-Deployment Training Cycles. The barges are mobile and can be towed to new bases or shipyards to support changing fleet requirements and also offer potential use for humanitarian missions and other temporary assignments.

How many US Navy ships are there?

490 ships
The United States Navy has approximately 490 ships in both active service and the reserve fleet, with approximately 90 more in either the planning and ordering stages or under construction, according to the Naval Vessel Register and published reports.

What is an APL number?

The APL/AEL database is a Navy General Distribution Allowance Parts List (APL) database that cross-references part numbers, NSNs, and CAGE codes to APLs. Obtained from the Navy Ships Parts Control Center (SPCC), this database shows top-down, bottom-up relationships between all parts in the system.

What are sleeping quarters on a ship called?

Berth: A sleeping area on a boat. Also, a place where a boat is tied up. “We slept in the forward berth while John and Amy slept in the quarter berth” or “We keep our boat in a berth at McDoodle’s Marina.” Bilge: The lowest section of a boat where water typically collects.

What is it like living in Navy barracks?

While there are high expectations for cleanliness and some restrictions, barracks living can be similar to apartment or dorm living, allowing service members quiet space to decompress, hang out with others, play videogames, and more.