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Home > VHF omnidirectional range


 

VOR, short for VHF Omni-directional Range, is a type of radio navigation system for aircraft. VOR's broadcast a VHF radio signal encoding both the identity of the station and the angle to it, telling the pilot in what direction he lies from the VOR station, refered to as the radial. Comparing two such measures on a chart allows for a fix. In many cases the VOR stations also provide distance measurement allowing for a one-station fix.

VORs became the major radio navigation system in the 1960s, when they took over from the older radio beacon system. The older system retroactively became known as non-direction beacons, or NDBs. VOR's major advantage is that the radio signal provides more information, allowing pilots to follow a line in the sky more easily than with an NDB. A major network of "air highways", known as airways, were set up linking the VORs and airports. On any particular part of the journey the airway would say to fly at a specific angle from a particular station, in which case the pilot simply tunes in the station on the radio, dials that angle into the indicator, and then keeps a pointer centered in a display.

VORs also provided considerably greater accuracy and reliability than NDBs due to a combination of factors in their construction. But these same factors also make VOR broadcasters and receivers rather expensive. In addition VORs have a limited range of about 160km, which means that an extensive network of stations needs to be used to provide reasonable coverage. The VOR network is a major cost in operating the current air navigation standards.

VORs are quickly being ignored in favour the much more user-friendly GPS system, and it is generally thought that they will be turned off around 2010. Oddly the airways have become so important to air traffic control that aircraft are forced to follow them even when they are using GPS for navigation.

1 How the VOR works

Each VOR operates on a radio frequency assigned to it between 108.0 MHz (Megahertz) and 117.95 MHz, which is in the VHF (very high frequency) range. The channel width is 50kHz. VHF was selected because it travels only in straight lines, resisting bending due to atmospheric effects, thereby making angle measurements accurate. However this also means that the signals do not operate "over the horizon", VOR is line-of-sight only, limiting the operating radius to 160 km.

VOR systems use a phase relationship between two signals to encode direction. The main "carrier" signal is a simple AM tone broadcasting the identity of the station in morse code. The second signal is sent on a 9960 Hz sideband, and is modulated with a 30 Hz signal. Both are sent from the highly directional antenna, rotating the signal 30 times a second. Note that the transmitter need not be physically rotating - most VOR transmitters use a phased array of antennae such that the signal is "rotated" electronically.

When the signal is received in the aircraft, the FM signal is decoded from the sideband and the frequency extracted. The two signals are then paired, resulting in a phase difference between the two signals. The phase difference between the two signals is the angle of the antenna at the instant the signal was sent, thereby encoding the direction to the station as the narrow beam washed over the receiver.

The phase difference is then mixed with a constant phase produced locally. This has the effect of changing the angle. The result is then sent to an amplifier, the output of which drives the signal pointers on a compass card. By changing the locally produced phase, using a knob known as the OBS, the pilot can zero out the angle to a station. For instance, if the pilot wishes to fly at 90 degrees to a station, the OBS mixes in a -90 phase, thereby making the indicator needle read zero (centered) when the plane is flying at 90 degrees to the station.

Many VORs have another navigation aid called DME (distance measuring equipment) at the same location. The combination may be called a VOR-DME or VORTAC, depending on the agency operating the DME. A VORTAC, for example, is a civilian VOR co-located with a military TACAN navigation system. Both VOR-DME and TACAN share the same DME system.

DME provides the pilot with the aircraft's distance from the ground station. By knowing both the distance and radial from the station, the aircraft's position can be plotted on an aeronautical chart from a single station.

Some VORs are low power for regional navigation and others are high power for high altitude long range navigation.



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