What is Compass?
A marine compass is a magnetic navigation instrument that uses a magnetized card floating in usually alcohol or mineral oil, to align with Earth’s magnetic field and indicate magnetic north.
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What it is
A marine compass is a magnetic navigation instrument that uses a magnetized card floating in usually alcohol or mineral oil, to align with Earth’s magnetic field and indicate magnetic north. Traditional binnacle-mounted compasses at the helm serve as the primary steering reference, while bulkhead-mounted compasses below decks provide backup navigation. Modern compasses often include internal compensating magnets to correct for deviation caused by the boat’s metal, electronics, or engine, which can create significant errors if uncorrected. Many are mounted on gimbals to keep the compass card level during boat motion and include built-in lighting for night use.
What it does
A compass provides a continuous and reliable heading, helping the helmsman maintain course, navigate to waypoints, and cross-check electronic systems like GPS or autopilot. It allows traditional navigation using paper charts, so the crew can find their way safely if electronics fail due to power loss, lightning, or other damage, especially at night, offshore or in poor visibility. It provides immediate feedback on turns and course changes, which visual navigation alone cannot always reveal in fog, darkness, or featureless open water.
Why it matters
If a compass fails or becomes unreadable due to fogged fluid, a broken card, or failed lighting, navigation must rely on the sun, stars, or GPS, which may not be available in overcast conditions or during electronic failures. Relying solely on GPS is risky because it is a single point of failure without a backup, and guesswork can become dangerous in offshore or low-visibility conditions. Uncorrected compass deviation can cause systematic steering errors, meaning the boat may miss harbors, enter shipping lanes, or approach hazards; for example, a 10–15 degree error over 100 miles can put the vessel 20 miles off course. Problems such as failed gimbals, loose mounting, fluid leaks, cracked housings, or nearby magnetic interference can make the compass card stick, swing erratically, or provide inaccurate headings, often going unnoticed until critical situations occur in fog, storms, or nighttime navigation.
General Maintenance
Inspect your compass at least once a year for fluid loss, such as bubbles larger than one-quarter inch, which can affect accuracy, as well as for a loose card, sticking pivots, or cracked housing. Fluid-filled compasses cannot be repaired at home and must be serviced or replaced by the manufacturer. Verify that compass lighting works before every night passage, carry spare bulbs for traditional compasses, and check that electronic compass displays are readable in the dark without overwhelming your night vision. Test compass accuracy quarterly by comparing the magnetic heading to known landmarks or GPS bearings, and check for new sources of deviation, such as added electronics, stored tools, or shifted equipment near the compass. Professional compass adjustment, often called swinging the ship, should be performed after major electrical installations, significant gear changes near the compass, or any event that changes the boat’s magnetic signature. While deviation cards can show heading errors at each compass point, proper adjustment is always preferable.
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