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What seats are ABCD in airplane?

In a single-aisle aircraft, with a 3-3 configuration, the common practice, and understanding is that ABC are window, middle, and aisle seats respectively on the left side of the airplane and DEF are aisle, middle and window seats apiece on the right-hand side.



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A AND F ARE WINDOW SEATS AND C AND D ARE AISLE SEATS ON A NORMAL SIZED DOMESTIC PLANE.

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What are airline cabin classes? There are 4 cabin classes offered on most airlines: economy, premium economy, business, and first class. “In the early days, all seats were first class,” said Seth Kaplan, managing partner of “Airline Weekly,” a subscriber-supported publication about the airline business.

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Economy seats may also be called coach, standard or main cabin seats. These seats are generally narrower than in other classes (from about 40 to 48 centimetres wide). The distance between seats (front to back) ranges from 76 inches to 86 centimetres so there is less legroom than in Business or First class.

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Is seat A or B by the window? With few exceptions, the A seat will always be by the left window. The F seat will be by the right window in a narrow-body jet with a single aisle. They'll skip numbers to keep the naming scheme correct in smaller jets, often keeping C and D for the aisles.

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Occasionally, aircraft with a seating structure of 2+2 may letter the seats as ACDF to keep with the standard of A/F being window and C/D being aisle on short-haul aircraft (which generally have 3+3 seats).

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All major airlines letter seats from right to left as you are standing in the aisle facing the rear of the plane. Thus seat “A” is always next to the right window.

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The convention seems to be that the window seats will be A and F, and the aisle seats C and D. So, where there are only two seats on each side, B and E are not used.

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With few exceptions, the A seat will always be by the left window. The F seat will be by the right window in a narrow-body jet with a single aisle. They'll skip numbers to keep the naming scheme correct in smaller jets, often keeping C and D for the aisles.

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What are the best seats on a plane?
  • Best seat for a smooth ride: A seat over the wing.
  • Best seat for sleepers: A window seat near the front.
  • Best seat for maximum legroom: An aisle seat in the second exit row.


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First Class seats are in rows 1 and 2. The seat layout from left to right is A, aisle, D, G, aisle, K. These seats come with a table at the front.

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A AND F ARE WINDOW SEATS AND C AND D ARE AISLE SEATS ON A NORMAL SIZED DOMESTIC PLANE.

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Most airlines assign booked seats before your flight; see Planning your flight. A few airlines do not assign seats (e.g., Southwest), but do assign you a boarding group based on how early you confirm your flight on-line within 24 hours of the flight.

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If half-cans of soda, 30 inches of legroom and rewards points get you excited, then you'll like it here. Why 17A? It's a great window seat in most planes and every blog deserves a name, right?

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C - Business Class. D - Business Class Discounted. E - Shuttle Service (no reservation allowed) or Economy/Coach Discounted. F - First Class. G - Conditional Reservation.

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