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  2. Hand compass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_compass

    Floating-card compass with prismatic sight (bearing 220° through eyepiece). The marine hand compass, or hand bearing compass|hand-bearing compass as it is termed in nautical use, has been used by small-boat or inshore sailors since at least the 1920s to keep a running course or to record precise bearings to landmarks on shore in order to determine position via the resection technique.

  3. Bearing compass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bearing_compass

    An old bearing compass. All hand compasses can be used to take bearings, but what distinguishes the bearing compass from the rest is the fact that it has some type of optics to allow viewing "at the same time" the compass marks and the observed target.

  4. Compass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compass

    Some compasses allow the scale to be adjusted to compensate for the local magnetic declination; if adjusted correctly, the compass will give the true bearing instead of the magnetic bearing. The modern hand-held protractor compass always has an additional direction-of-travel (DOT) arrow or indicator inscribed on the baseplate. To check one's ...

  5. Navigational instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navigational_instrument

    Bearing compass used to determine magnetic bearings of landmarks, other ships or celestial bodies. Magnetic compass used to determine the magnetic heading of the ship.

  6. Pelorus (instrument) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelorus_(instrument)

    In marine navigation, a pelorus is a reference tool for maintaining bearing of a vessel at sea. It is a "simplified compass" without a directive element, suitably mounted and provided with vanes to permit observation of relative bearings. [1] The instrument was named for one Pelorus, said to have been the pilot for Hannibal, circa 203 BC.

  7. Bearing (navigation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bearing_(navigation)

    A compass rose, showing absolute bearings in degrees. In nautical navigation the absolute bearing is the clockwise angle between north and an object observed from the vessel. If the north used as reference is the true geographical north then the bearing is a true bearing whereas if the reference used is magnetic north then the bearing is a ...

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  9. Piloting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piloting

    On shipboard, navigators may use a pelorus to obtain bearings, relative to the vessel, from charted objects. A hand bearing compass provides magnetic bearings. [12] On land a hand compass provides bearings to landmarks. [13]