Chartwork practice

Course to steer practice

Course to steer questions test whether you can allow for tidal stream, boat speed, intended ground track, leeway, and compass correction. The process is visual, so repeated vector practice matters.

LevelPracticeWatch for
Day SkipperSingle CTS vectors with tidal set, drift, boat speed, and ground trackPlotting tide in the wrong direction or from the wrong point.
Coastal SkipperLonger legs, changing streams, leeway, and passage constraintsSolving the maths but missing the practical decision.
YachtmasterIntegrated CTS, EP/DR, fixes, electronics, and weather/tide judgementFailing to explain assumptions and cross-checks.

Draw the vector triangle before calculating

CTS is easier when you draw tide, water track, and ground track as a triangle. Rushing straight to arithmetic causes direction errors.

Keep true, magnetic, and compass separate

Solve the navigation problem first, then apply variation and deviation carefully. Mixing these too early makes the answer hard to audit.

Use advanced revision for multi-hour work

Coastal Skipper and Yachtmaster chartwork add changing tidal streams, leeway, fixes, and practical judgement around the plotted answer.

Common questions

What is a CTS vector triangle?

It is a plotted triangle that combines tidal stream, boat speed through the water, and intended ground track to find the course to steer.

When should I move from Day Skipper CTS to advanced CTS?

Move on when single-hour CTS feels reliable and you can explain tide, leeway, and compass correction without guessing.

Choose the revision route that matches what you are studying now.

Access is course-specific unless a bundle clearly says otherwise. Each brand stays on its own domain inside the Compass Revision Network.