Aviation Navigation Basics

Great circle routes, wind correction, and magnetic variation

Calculate distance and bearing Plan your route with wind correction
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Great Circle vs. Rhumb Line

Great Circle

  • ✓ Shortest distance between points
  • Saves fuel on long flights
  • ✗ Heading changes continuously
  • ✗ Appears curved on flat maps

Best for: Flights over 500nm

Rhumb Line

  • ✓ Constant heading throughout
  • ✓ Simple to fly manually
  • ✗ Longer than great circle
  • ✗ Less fuel efficient

Best for: Short flights, VFR navigation

Example: New York to London

Great circle: 3,459 nm | Rhumb line: 3,540 nm

Difference: 81 nm (2.3%) - saves ~800 lbs of fuel on a widebody jet

Magnetic Variation

True north (geographic) and magnetic north differ. This difference is called magnetic variation or declination.

The Memory Aid

"East is least, West is best"

Subtract easterly variation, add westerly variation when converting true to magnetic.

Location Variation Example
Los Angeles 12°E True 090° → Mag 078°
New York 13°W True 090° → Mag 103°
London 0° (agonic) True = Magnetic

Wind Correction Angle

To maintain your course in wind, you must "crab" into the wind by the wind correction angle (WCA).

WCA = arcsin(Crosswind Component ÷ True Airspeed)

Point the nose into the wind by this angle

10 kt XW
@ 100 kt TAS
≈ 6° WCA
20 kt XW
@ 100 kt TAS
≈ 12° WCA
30 kt XW
@ 120 kt TAS
≈ 14° WCA

Course vs. Heading vs. Track

Course: The intended path over the ground (what you want to fly)
Heading: Direction the nose is pointing (corrected for wind)
Track: Actual path over the ground (what you're actually flying)

Goal: Adjust heading so that track equals course, despite wind.

Related Topics

True north (geographic) and magnetic north differ. This difference is called magnetic variation or declination, and it varies by location and changes slowly over time.

Easterly Variation

Magnetic north is east of true north

Subtract from true bearing

Zero Variation

Magnetic and true north align

Agonic line (rare)

Westerly Variation

Magnetic north is west of true north

Add to true bearing

Memory Aid: "East is least, West is best"

When variation is easterly, subtract from true heading. When westerly, add to true heading.

Add essential wind correction content to cover the topic mentioned in the title but missing from the article

Wind Correction Angle

Wind affects aircraft heading and ground speed. The wind correction angle (WCA) is the angular difference between heading and track needed to maintain course.

Wind Triangle Components

  • Track: Intended path over ground
  • Heading: Direction aircraft points
  • Drift: Sideways movement from wind
  • Ground Speed: Actual speed over ground

Headwind/Tailwind

Affects ground speed only

Headwind: Reduces ground speed
Tailwind: Increases ground speed

Crosswind

Requires heading correction

Turn into wind to maintain track
WCA = arcsin(crosswind ÷ TAS)

Add practical application section to bridge theory with real-world flight operations and common pilot errors

Practical Navigation Applications

Flight Planning Workflow

  1. Plot route on chart (great circle for long flights)
  2. Measure true course and distance
  3. Apply magnetic variation to get magnetic course
  4. Get wind forecast and calculate wind correction
  5. Apply WCA to magnetic course for compass heading
  6. Calculate ground speed and flight time

GPS vs. Traditional

GPS automatically handles great circle navigation and wind correction, but pilots must understand the principles for:

  • • Backup navigation
  • • System failures
  • • Regulatory requirements

Common Mistakes

  • • Confusing true vs. magnetic bearings
  • • Wrong variation sign (E/W)
  • • Using outdated variation values
  • • Ignoring wind correction on short flights

True north (geographic) and magnetic north differ. This difference is called magnetic variation and changes based on your location and time.

Easterly Variation

Magnetic north is east of true north

Example: +15°E

Zero Variation

Magnetic and true north align

Agonic line

Westerly Variation

Magnetic north is west of true north

Example: -20°W

💡 Memory Aid: "East is least, West is best"

• Easterly variation: subtract from true heading
• Westerly variation: add to true heading

Add comprehensive wind correction section to cover this fundamental navigation concept mentioned in the title

Wind Correction Angle

Wind affects your aircraft's ground track. To maintain your intended course, you must apply a wind correction angle (WCA) to counteract wind drift.

Wind Triangle Components

TAS

True Airspeed

Your speed through air

W/V

Wind Vector

Wind speed & direction

GS

Ground Speed

Your speed over ground

Quick WCA Estimation (Light Aircraft)

Formula: WCA ≈ (Wind Speed × sin(Wind Angle)) ÷ True Airspeed × 60

Example: TAS 120kt, Wind 270°/20kt, Track 300°
Wind angle = 30°, WCA ≈ (20 × 0.5) ÷ 120 × 60 = 5° left correction

True north (geographic) and magnetic north differ. This difference is called magnetic variation or declination, and it varies by location and changes over time.

Easterly Variation

Magnetic north is east of true north

Formula: True heading = Magnetic heading + Variation

Westerly Variation

Magnetic north is west of true north

Formula: True heading = Magnetic heading - Variation

Memory Aid: "East is least, West is best" - Add easterly variation, subtract westerly variation when converting from magnetic to true.

Add comprehensive wind correction section to reach minimum word count and provide practical navigation information

Wind Correction Angle

Wind affects aircraft course and groundspeed. The wind correction angle (WCA) compensates for wind drift to maintain your intended track.

Key Concepts

Headwind/Tailwind

  • • Affects groundspeed only
  • • No heading correction needed
  • • Headwind decreases groundspeed
  • • Tailwind increases groundspeed

Crosswind

  • • Requires heading correction
  • • Turn into the wind
  • • WCA = arcsin(wind speed ÷ true airspeed)
  • • Maximum drift at 90° wind angle

Quick Estimation: 1-in-60 rule

For every 60 knots of airspeed, 1 knot of crosswind = 1° of drift per 60nm