What's the customary technique for adjusting the magnetic compass
My magnetic compass was way off. I found the screw that adjusts it. I took the compass off and adjusted it away from the aircraft and from interfering steel structures and objects. This I did using lines-of-sight to geographic references for which I knew the bearings. But how can I be sure that the adjustment remains valid once I put the compass back in place?
I realize that I may have been "re-inventing the wheel." So how experienced pilots do it?
Thanks for your advice
Dov
The techniques I look for should not require dedicated facilities
AC 43.13-1B Ch. 12 Sec. 3 Par. 12-37 relates to "real" aircraft that operate from "real" airports, for which the compass is a critical navigation equipment. It requires using a compass rose, probably available only at such airports. But I fly a basic LSA with no aviation electronic navigation equipment, operate from a "bush" unpaved airstrip, navigate by landmarks and car GPS, and use the compass only as an accessory. (That's why I ventured to do the adjustment myself in the first place.)
So the techniques I can use should not require dedicated facilities, on the one hand, and on the other hand not be expected to result in any great precision.