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I’m a flight attendant — here’s the ‘secret’ behind black triangles in airplane cabins

They’re not pointless.

A flight attendant for Philippines-based airline Cebu Pacific is sharing the “secret” meaning behind black triangle stickers in airplane cabins.

“1. Passengers sitting next to the triangles get the best view of the wings,” Henny Joyce Lim explained in a that . “2. If flight crew need to check the wings these triangles let them know the best vantage points for the slats and flaps outside.”

"1. Passengers sitting next to the triangles get the best view of the wings," Lim explained on TikTok.
“1. Passengers sitting next to the triangles get the best view of the wings,” Lim explained on TikTok. tiktok.com/@_hennylim_

In the 36-second clip, which has 𓆏landed more than 304,700 views, Lim stands in an empty Airꦏbus 320 as she advises passengers to look for the triangles in the cabin if they get to choose their own seat.

“Anybody who loves taking window shots or videos will get the best view over the wings from these seats,” she declared.

TikTok comme🐽nters tried to gauge the rows with the triangles from watching the video.

“Row 10 and Row 18. got it,” one spied.

“Either at 10 or at 18,” Lim confirmed. “But it still depends on the type of aircraft or depending on the type of aircraft…”

“I saw that. I was seated at 29A then a few seats from me I saw something like that. At first I thought a fly had entered the plane,” another follower confessed.

"2. If flight crew need to check the wings these triangles let them know the best vantage points for the slats and flaps outside," she added.
“2. If flight crew need to check the wings these triangles let them know the best vantage points for the slats and flaps outside,” she added. tiktok.com/@_hennylim_

Retired aerospace engineer Lee Ba𝓀llentine weighed in on the black triangles mystery .

“The black triangle marks the location of what has been called ‘William Shatner’s Seat,’ the seat with the clearest view of the wing. This is the place inside the airplane from which you can get the best visual check for ice or other problems,” Ballentine disclosed.

“The Shatner reference is to one of the strangest Twilight Zone episodes, ‘Nightmare at 20,000 Feet,‘ which first aired on October 11, 1963,” Ballentine continued. “In it, Shatner’s character sees a gremlin on the wing of the plane he’s a passenger on.”

For her part, Lim has also shared the “secret” to the on an airplane wing and .

Additionally, she’s revealed the “scary” reason wh🐓y flight attendants sit on their hands while in their jum🍌pseats.