Each competitor is required to carry a
control card, and to present it at the Start and hand it in at the Finish. The control card is marked by some means at each control point to show that the competitor has completed the course correctly. In both
trail orienteering and
North American style
mounted orienteering, it may not be feasible, safe, or permitted for the competitor to go to the control point itself. Instead, the competitor views the control point from a short distance and marks the control card with a pen. Several marking schemes are in use, including a pre-printed multiple choice form, and a "secret word" posted at the control point that the competitor must copy down. In foot orienteering, the oldest form of orienteering, the first control cards were
card stock with a
perforated stub, the stub to be handed in at the Start as a safety check. At each control, originally, the control staff or the competitor
rubber stamped the control card using a rubber stamp and inkpad kept at that control. Rubber stamps soon were replaced with
ticket punches, usually with a different punch shape (circular, square, diamond, star, etc.) at each control. Card stock control cards are in limited use today, having been mostly replaced by weatherproof stock such as
Tyvek. Ticket punches have been replaced by
needle punches that punch a pattern of small holes in the control card (similar to a
perfin). Image:Control nippers.JPG|Ticket punch Image:Orientatiepaalperforatorpinnetjes Silva 433.JPG|Needle punch Image:Controlcard.jpg|Control card marked with 14 different needle punches Image:Controlcard-crop.jpg|Close-up of same control card Image:TrailO control card.pdf|Multiple choice control card used in
TrailO Weatherproof stock and needle punches are being replaced with electronic punch systems. The orienteer carries a small electronic control card that is a memory card encased in plastic and provided with a strap to attach to the finger. At each control point, and at the Start and Finish too, the orienteer inserts the card into a battery-operated station. There are two principal types of these, SPORTIdent and EMIT although newer technologies are starting to emerge using RFID wristbands timing or QR barcode timing such as iOrienteering. The SPORTIdent control card is a small plastic stick ("e-card" or "e-punch', also "dibber" and "fingerstick"). The EMIT control card is a larger, card-shaped stick with a built-in backup feature: a small paper card inside the control card is pierced by a pin in a specific location at each station. In both electronic punch systems, the control code (number) and punch time at each control point are recorded on the card. At the finish, data on the card are copied to a computer and a receipt is printed to confirm or deny that the course has been completed correctly. A system has been developed to report these data by
amateur radio. When a control card is punched, the reporting transmitter sends its own identifier and the orienteer's identifier and punch time. This is received at a base station, often located at the Finish, where the orienteer's progress on the course can be monitored and displayed to spectators. The RFID and iOrienteering systems work differently. The RFID bands do not store any information but are simply used to record the runner 'dibbing' at the control box, the data being transmitted via the mobile phone data system back to the finish. it allows for instant/active viewing of positions and timings- but mobile reception is needed and this reduces it usability in some areas. iOrienteering works but using the runners smart phone camera to record control points as they are passed. The information is stored on the phone and uploaded at the end of the run. It is more suitable to permanent courses or simple low key orienteering or navigation events, but can be used widely at low cost for almost any navigation event or challenge Image:E-punch2.jpg|EMIT control card Image:E-punch.jpg|Orienteer using a SPORTIdent control card at a control point that has a needle punch for backup Image:Ardf transmitter-2m.jpg|ARDF control point equipped with an electronic punch station and a radio transmitter that reports each use of the punch to a base station ==Exceptions==