Master General Navigation for your ATPL theory exam
Free practice questions covering great circles, chart projections, triangle of velocities, variation and deviation, CRP-5, dead reckoning, time calculations and position fixing — with detailed explanations for every answer.
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Topics covered in this question bank
All major General Navigation topic areas from the EASA ATPL syllabus, from Earth geometry through to operational navigation planning.
Mercator, Lambert and Polar Stereographic — properties compared
Chart projection properties are directly tested and must be memorised precisely. The key exam question is always which chart shows great circles as straight lines.
| Projection | Rhumb Lines | Great Circles | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mercator | Straight lines ✓ | Curved (except equator & meridians) | Equatorial regions, plotting rhumb tracks |
| Lambert Conformal | Curved | Approximately straight ✓ | Mid-latitude en-route charts (most used) |
| Polar Stereographic | Curved | Approximately straight ✓ | Polar regions above 78°N/S |
True → Magnetic → Compass Conversion
True ± Variation = Magnetic ± Deviation = Compass CADET mnemonic: Compass ADd East variation for True. Variation W = subtract from True to get Magnetic. Variation E = add.What to expect on the real exam
General Navigation contains a high proportion of calculation questions — triangle of velocities, time conversions, distance/speed/time problems and drift/heading problems on the CRP-5. Many questions give you a diagram or scenario and require you to extract values and calculate. Practise with actual numbers, not just theory.
Why General Navigation is a core ATPL skill
Navigation underpins all flying. Understanding how to determine position, plan tracks, account for wind, convert between direction types, and interpret charts is fundamental to safe flight operations worldwide. General Navigation builds the conceptual foundation that Radio Navigation and Flight Planning build upon.
Questions are aligned with the EASA ATPL syllabus and cover the complete range from Earth geometry and chart theory through to operational dead reckoning, time zone calculations and the practical use of navigation computers.
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