NDB locations

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chrismol1

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Does anyone know of a website that has the locations or a map of where NDB's are?
 

inigo88

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Try finding your house on a VFR sectional chart at www.skyvector.com . Then look for NDBs. If it's the compass locator type (co-located with a 75 Mhz marker beacon on an instrument approach) it may not be on the sectional but would definitely show up in the FAA's Digital Airport Facilities Directory for New York. Give it a try here: http://www.avn.faa.gov/index.asp?xml=naco/online/d_afd

Good Luck.

Inigo
 

coldbricks

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chrismoll, the nearest to us is Schenectady. It is located on the field and is called HUNTER.

There are not that many NDB and they are being phased out..as for VORTAC/VORs on the other hand there is one on the Albany field, one in Cambride and also one in Glens Falls

I have found a lot of people dont know what an NDB is...as you may know an NDB is literally nothing but a low power AM station. Basically a needle in the cockpit points to where the tower is. It actually works for AM commercial broadcast stations too..dont know if thats illegal still! If you tune an NDB you can hear the phase noise and the morse code usually...kinda fun. It is called non-directional because it has no idea where you are, only the plane does...and the thing transmits in all directions...as opposed to VOR which has radials and knows the plane is on a radial. NDBs are much easier to understand how to USE than VORs, but in actuality they are the old-skool, dusty way of naviagation....most do not have DME. They are usually used in ILS systems to find the slope point or you might see them on the outermarkers....sometimes used for fixes too..
Best,
ColdBricks
 
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DaveNF2G

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NDB = Non Directional Beacon. An interesting name for a device that is actually omnidirectional. A non-directional radio would send a signal in no direction at all.

I second the recommendation of Airnav.com. They have airports, navaids, and intersections.
 

trace1

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I have found a lot of people dont know what an NDB is...as you may know an NDB is literally nothing but a low power AM station. Basically a needle in the cockpit points to where the tower is. It actually works for AM commercial broadcast stations too..dont know if thats illegal still!

This reminds me of when I went flying in a small plane about 30 years ago.

I went up with my older Brother and a friend of his who was a pilot. As we were flying I remember the pilot made some settings to locate the tower for the radio station that my Brother worked for.

It wasn't long until the airplane was "on course" to that location and we circled the tower, from a great distance of course, and then flew on to do a few other things. I even got to "steer' the aircraft while in-flight, thought that was pretty cool, me about 15 years old, "flying" a plane!!!
 

zz0468

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NDB = Non Directional Beacon. An interesting name for a device that is actually omnidirectional. A non-directional radio would send a signal in no direction at all.

Yeah, the terminology is a bit odd, but it's non-directional as opposed to a VOR that transmits 360 separate radials.
 

zz0468

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Does anyone know of a website that has the locations or a map of where NDB's are?

Are you interested in just looking at one, or are you interested in hearing one on the air?

I actually have spent a fair amount of time listening to distant NDB's, and even though they don't send much besides a 3 letter morse ID, it's fun to chase them.

The old NDB's are getting phased out, but there are still plenty out there to hear, and the marine beacons don't seem to be going away. There are also DGPS stations in the beacon band that are every bit as fun to chase, maybe more so. They run higher power, so they can be heard several thousand miles away if the conditions are right.
 

K4DHR

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NDBs are indeed disappearing rather rapidly, they just decommissioned the CATTA and REDAN NDBs, which were associated with approaches to KATL, just this week.

Some NDBs may have the ASOS/AWOS weather for the airport broadcast over them, but these too, are becoming increasingly rare. This is because the ADFs in aircraft are being removed and replaced with GPS units instead of getting fixed.

In the summer, I listen to baseball games when I'm flying with the ADF if the plane I'm flying is equipped with one. Just flip it over to the BFO mode and tune it in like if you were in your car. In days past commercial AM stations were actually charted to allow pilots to navigate with them, since many of them were much more powerful than most NDBs. I have a couple of older sectionals (7-8 years old) that still have a couple of commercial stations marked on them.
 

nr2d

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When I was still flying with FAA Flight Inspection not only did we check NDBs associated with ILS and NDB approaches there was at least 1 in West Virginia that was a high power enroute NDB and NAS Lakehurst in NJ had a UHF NDB.
 

TDTerry

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NDB

As a retired FAA tech, I can explain the non-directional description. FAA has funny ways of naming things. Actually to the FAA, "non-directional" means it is not directed in one direction. "Omni" would be a better name or "All directions".
 
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