The Secret Meaning of Airplane Wing Lights

How do pilots know the exact direction of another aircraft when it’s pitch black at 35,000 feet?

About This Video

How do pilots know the exact direction of another aircraft when it’s pitch black at 35,000 feet? The answer is a brilliant visual code that is actually older than flight itself!

If you look closely at any commercial jet, you'll see a strict international standard: an aviation red light on the left wingtip and an aviation green light on the right. These aren't just for visibility—they instantly reveal the aircraft's orientation. If a pilot sees both red and green, the plane is heading straight toward them. See only green? The plane is crossing to the right. See a single white light? You're looking at the tail.

Inherited directly from 19th-century maritime navigation laws, this simple port-and-starboard logic remains one of aviation’s most trusted safety systems.

Did you know these lights originally came from ships? Let me know in the comments!

TheAeroGraphy & aviationstream.com

#aviation#flight#sciencefacts#aerospace#pilot#engineering#aviationdaily#airplanes#history#shorts

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