AIM ¶ 1-1-2 — Nondirectional Radio Beacon (NDB)
AIM 1-1-2 explained: NDB frequencies, ADF homing, compass locators, identification monitoring, and why no failure flag means pilots must verify the ident.
A Nondirectional Radio Beacon (NDB) is a ground-based low/medium frequency transmitter that an aircraft equipped with an Automatic Direction Finder (ADF) can use to determine bearings and home to the station.
Key facts to remember:
- Frequency band: typically 190–535 kHz in the U.S.; ICAO Annex 10 allows 190–1750 kHz.
- Modulation: continuous carrier with 400 Hz or 1020 Hz modulation.
- Identification: a continuous three-letter Morse code ident (except during voice transmissions). Compass Locators (NDBs paired with ILS markers) are the exception and don't transmit the 3-letter ident in the same manner.
- Voice: NDBs carry voice unless the class designator includes a "W" (e.g., HW = without voice).
NDBs are vulnerable to interference and erroneous bearings from lightning, precipitation static, and—at night—distant stations on the same frequency. Critically, ADF receivers have no failure flag to warn the pilot of bad data. A noisy or erratic ident usually means the needle is unreliable; voice, music, or a wrong ident may indicate a steady false bearing. Continuously monitor the ident any time you're navigating by NDB.