AIM Text
- COPs are prescribed for Federal airways, jet routes, area navigation routes, or other direct routes for which an MEA is designated under 14 CFR part 95. The COP is a point along the route or airway segment between two adjacent navigation facilities or waypoints where changeover in navigation guidance should occur. At this point, the pilot should change navigation receiver frequency from the station behind the aircraft to the station ahead.
- The COP is normally located midway between the navigation facilities for straight route segments, or at the intersection of radials or courses forming a dogleg in the case of dogleg route segments. When the COP is NOT located at the midway point, aeronautical charts will depict the COP location and give the mileage to the radio aids.
- COPs are established for the purpose of preventing loss of navigation guidance, to prevent frequency interference from other facilities, and to prevent use of different facilities by different aircraft in the same airspace. Pilots are urged to observe COPs to the fullest extent.
Source: FAA Aeronautical Information Manual · current edition · paragraph 5-3-6.
Research Notes
AIM 5-3-6 covers Course to Be Flown — the requirement to maintain the assigned or filed course.
The requirement (§ 91.181): IFR aircraft must fly the centerline of the assigned airway or route. Deviations require ATC clearance.
RNAV operations: Modern IFR uses GPS-derived direct courses. The pilot flies the great-circle course between waypoints. Same requirement to maintain that course unless ATC authorizes deviation.
Weather deviation: Pilots may request deviation for weather. "Center, Cessna 23U, requesting deviation 20 degrees right for weather." ATC will approve or deny based on traffic.