Definition
Ground-based radio transmitters that broadcast a low or medium frequency signal equally in all directions. An aircraft equipped with an automatic direction finder (ADF) receiver uses the signal to determine the bearing from the aircraft to the station, allowing the pilot to navigate to or from the beacon. NDBs may be used as standalone navigation aids, as compass locators associated with an instrument landing system, or as the basis for non-precision instrument approaches.
Plain English
A simple radio station on the ground that sends out a steady signal in every direction. An instrument in the aircraft points toward the station, so the pilot knows which way to fly to reach it.
Context Anchor
Seen on instrument procedure charts, route descriptions, and naming conventions for procedures based on non-directional beacons.
Derivation
‘Non-directional’ means the signal is not aimed in any particular direction — it radiates outward equally on all sides. The receiver in the aircraft does the directional work by sensing where the signal is coming from. This is the opposite of a VOR, which transmits directional information itself.
Why Pilots Care
They provide a reliable backup navigation method when satellite systems are unavailable and are used to define certain instrument approach procedures.
Analogy
Imagine a radio version of a lighthouse that doesn't flash light but sends a constant signal; your equipment tells you exactly which direction it is from your position no matter where you are around it.
Grounding Statement
Picture a radio station on the ground sending its signal outward in a circle while the airplane’s equipment shows where that station is relative to the airplane.
Intuition Check
Do not read non-directional as meaning useless for direction. The beacon itself does not point, but the airplane’s equipment can use its signal to show the direction to the beacon.
Example Sentence 1
After losing GPS, the pilot tuned the NDB frequency and used the ADF needle to track inbound to the airport.
Example Sentence 2
NDBs remain useful in remote areas where other navigation aids are limited.