Question 32
ONC02BOTH INTERNATIONAL & INLAND Which of the following describes a vessel exhibiting the lights shown in illustration D084RR below?

AI Explanation
The Correct Answer is A.
### Why Option A ("not under command") is Correct:
The illustration D084RR shows a vessel exhibiting two all-round red lights displayed vertically. According to the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREGs), Rule 27(b), a vessel that is **not under command (NUC)** shall exhibit:
1. Two all-round red lights in a vertical line where they can best be seen.
2. When making way through the water, masthead lights, sidelights, and a sternlight.
3. When stopped, only the two all-round red lights (and potentially sidelights and a sternlight if she is less than 50 meters long and not required to show the masthead light).
The core identifying signal for a vessel NUC is the vertical alignment of **two all-round red lights**. Therefore, the vessel in the illustration is exhibiting the lights for a vessel not under command.
### Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
* **B) showing improper lights:** The lights shown (two vertical all-round red lights) are prescribed lights for a specific regulated condition (NUC). They are proper lights, not improper lights, assuming the vessel is genuinely unable to maneuver.
* **C) dredging:** A vessel engaged in dredging (or underwater operations) exhibits different lights. She shows three all-round lights in a vertical line: Red-White-Red (Rule 27(d)).
* **D) towing:** A vessel engaged in towing shows specific lights depending on the length of the tow. Generally, this involves two or three masthead lights in a vertical line (instead of the usual one), and a yellow towing light above the sternlight (Rule 24). It does not use two vertical all-round red lights as its primary identifying characteristic.
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