Definition
A magnetic compass that displays heading on a rotating vertical card behind a fixed lubber line, similar in appearance to a heading indicator. It uses a magnet-driven mechanism that reduces the turning and acceleration errors found in a traditional float-type magnetic compass, and presents the heading in a more intuitive, top-of-card format.
Plain English
A magnetic compass that looks and reads like a normal heading indicator, with the heading shown on an upright dial instead of through a small window on a floating ball. It is easier to read and behaves more steadily in turns than the older liquid-filled compass.
Context Anchor
You see this term when studying cockpit direction instruments, especially in discussions of magnetic compass indications during instrument flying.
Derivation
Called 'vertical card' because the compass card stands upright facing the pilot, rather than floating horizontally inside a fluid-filled bowl as in the older 'wet' compass.
Why Pilots Care
It supplies the primary magnetic heading reference needed for navigation, course tracking, and instrument approaches when outside visual references are unavailable.
Analogy
It is like replacing a hard-to-read sideways scale with an upright dial that looks more like the other direction instruments on the panel.
Intuition Check
Do not assume “card” means a paper card or that “vertical” means the airplane is flying straight up. Here, “vertical card” means the compass scale is displayed upright in front of the pilot.
Example Sentence 1
After losing vacuum power, the pilot flew headings using the vertical card magnetic compass, which was much easier to interpret than the older whiskey compass.
Example Sentence 2
After the electrical failure the pilot relied on the vertical card magnetic compass to maintain the assigned heading.