NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Hand Bearing Compass Deviation
From: Gary LaPook
Date: 2015 Jun 30, 23:36 -0700
From: Gary LaPook
Date: 2015 Jun 30, 23:36 -0700
We have s problem with magnetic compasses in airplanes. Compasses turn to align the needle with the local earth's magnetic field. Standing on the ground the compass needle is balanced to stay horizontal so it is constrained to sense only the horizontal component of the earth's field and is not affected by the dip. Some high end hand held compasses have a weight on the southern end of the needle to balance the needle and keep the north end from tilting downward in response to the dip. (In the northern hemisphere.) In some this is in the form of a piece of wire that can be moved in and out from the pivot when the compass is taken to different locations where the dip is different. Compasses for use in the southern hemisphere have the weight on the other end of the needle. But, in flight, when the plane is turning it is banked and the local level in the plane is also banked so the compass needle is freed to align with the dip as well as the horizontal component which causes erroneous readings. If you start on a heading of magnetic north and then start a turn the compass indicates a turn in the opposite direction, it "lags," approximately the amount of the magnetic latitude. In Chicago a turn from north to the east initially indicates a turn of approximately 40 degrees in the opposite direction, the compass showing 320°. This effect then slowly is reduced as the turn progresses, the lag gets smaller and disappears as the plane turns through east. On southerly heading the compass leads the turn and so the compass appears to speed up and gets all the way to 220° by the time the plane has reached only south. This also occurs when the plane accelerates or decelerates on east and west headings since the compass card is also tilted due to the acceleration and can respond to the dip of the magnetic field. Pilots are trained to deal with these errors and usually only read the compass when the plane is in straight and level, un-accelerated flight. Back to your electronic compass. Since there is now way to ensure that the sensor is held horizontally it might be responding to the local dip. gl -------------------------------------------- On Tue, 6/30/15, David Flemingwrote: Subject: [NavList] Re: Hand Bearing Compass Deviation To: garylapook@pacbell.net Date: Tuesday, June 30, 2015, 9:26 PM Magnetic Fields are horizontal virtually nowhere on the earths surface. They have dip, ie point also in a vertical direction as well as horizontally.When you speak of near power lines do you mean seeing interferrence from AC or DC power lines. It is likely that needle compasses do not have high frequency response so they would not be sensitive to 60 cycle- this is speculation needs to be verified.Flux gate compasses use 10s of KHz signals to sense the magnetic field. Obviously their designers are aware of this so I would expect they filter and diesign with 60 cycle interference in mind, so who knows.Dave F