Definition
A ground-based, low or medium frequency radio transmitter that broadcasts a continuous signal equally in all directions. Aircraft equipped with an automatic direction finder (ADF) receiver use this signal to determine the bearing from the aircraft to the station, allowing the pilot to home to, track from, or fix position relative to the beacon.
Plain English
A simple radio station on the ground that sends out a steady signal in every direction. A receiver in the airplane points an arrow at the station so the pilot knows which direction it lies from the aircraft.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument navigation, instrument approach descriptions, and discussions of older ground-based navigation aids, especially when using an aircraft receiver designed for NDB signals.
Derivation
Nondirectional' means the signal is not aimed in any particular direction — it radiates outward equally on all sides, like light from a bare bulb. This contrasts with a VOR, which sends out distinct directional information the receiver can decode as a specific radial.
Why Pilots Care
NDBs serve as a reliable backup navigation aid when GPS or VOR signals are unavailable and support some instrument approach procedures.
Analogy
Think of an NDB as a lighthouse for radios. The lighthouse shines its light in every direction; a ship can see the light and know where the lighthouse is, but the light itself doesn't tell the ship which way to steer.
Grounding Statement
Picture a small ground transmitter sending the same signal outward in every direction while the airplane’s receiver points back toward it.
Intuition Check
Non-directional does not mean it gives no useful direction. It means the beacon does not send a built-in route; the aircraft’s receiver figures out the direction to the beacon.
Example Sentence 1
After passing the NDB, the pilot turned outbound and began timing the procedure turn.
Example Sentence 2
Inbound tracking on the NDB allowed the aircraft to maintain the published approach course in low visibility.