Definition
The maximum loads and stresses an airplane's airframe is certificated to withstand without permanent deformation or failure, expressed primarily as load factor limits (positive and negative G limits) and maximum maneuvering speed (V_A). Exceeding these limits risks bending, buckling, or breaking primary structure.
Plain English
The point beyond which the airplane's body and wings can be damaged by the forces placed on them. Every airplane is built to handle only so much pulling, pushing, and twisting before something bends or breaks.
Context Anchor
Encountered in steep-turn training, airplane operating manuals, and any discussion of maneuvering without overstressing the airplane.
Derivation
From Latin structura, 'a building or arrangement,' and limitare, 'to bound or set a limit.' In aviation it refers to the boundaries of what the airplane's physical structure can take.
Why Pilots Care
Exceeding structural limitations during maneuvers can cause immediate or cumulative airframe damage, leading to loss of control or in-flight breakup.
Grounding Statement
In a steep turn, pulling harder can make the airplane carry more force than it does in normal straight flight.
Intuition Check
Structural limitations does not mean the airplane is weak or poorly built. It means the airplane has tested, approved boundaries that the pilot must stay within.
Example Sentence 1
Before entering a 60-degree banked steep turn, the pilot reviewed the airplane's structural limitations to confirm the maneuver stayed within the certificated load factor.
Example Sentence 2
The pilot reduced bank angle immediately when the load factor approached the published structural limitations for the normal category.