Definition
A ground-based radio navigation aid that transmits signals in the VHF band (108.0–117.95 MHz) allowing a suitably equipped aircraft to determine its bearing to or from the station along any of 360 selectable courses, called radials. The aircraft's VOR receiver compares two signals broadcast by the station — a reference signal and a variable signal — and the phase difference between them indicates the aircraft's magnetic bearing from the station.
Plain English
A radio beacon on the ground that lets a pilot know which direction they are from it, measured around a full circle. The pilot picks a line out from the station and the cockpit instrument shows whether they are on that line, left of it, or right of it.
Context Anchor
Seen when using navigation instruments to tune a ground station, follow a selected course, or check position during flight.
Derivation
Omni- comes from Latin omnis, meaning 'all' or 'every'. Directional refers to direction. So omni-directional means the station sends usable signals in every direction — 360 of them — rather than along a single fixed path. Knowing this clarifies that one VOR station serves pilots flying any heading near it, not just one route.
Why Pilots Care
Gives a dependable navigation reference that works in any weather and does not require flying directly over the station.
Analogy
Think of a VOR like a lighthouse that works by radio instead of light. It does not just say “I am over here”; it helps the aircraft determine its direction relative to the station.
Intuition Check
Do not read “range” here as distance. A VOR mainly gives direction from a radio station; distance requires separate distance-measuring equipment.
Example Sentence 1
After takeoff, the pilot tuned the VOR to 113.5 and tracked the 270 radial outbound toward the next waypoint.
Example Sentence 2
We tracked the VOR radial to stay on course during the cross-country flight.