Definition
The relationship between an aircraft's airspeed and the load factor (G-force) it experiences or can safely sustain. This relationship is plotted on a Vg diagram (velocity-G diagram), which shows the airspeed range within which the aircraft can be flown without exceeding structural limits or aerodynamic stall.
Plain English
How fast you are flying compared to how many Gs the airplane is feeling. The two are linked: at low speeds the wing stalls before it can pull many Gs, and at high speeds the wing can pull enough Gs to bend or break the airplane.
Context Anchor
Seen when reading the Vg diagram in load factor discussions, especially when learning how speed and control inputs affect the airplane’s structural limits.
Derivation
Velocity' here means airspeed, and 'G' refers to the force of gravity used as a unit of load. 'G load' is the multiple of normal gravity the aircraft and its occupants feel. Pairing the two shows that load on the airplane depends directly on how fast it is moving when a maneuver is made.
Why Pilots Care
It shows the speeds and G limits that keep the airplane structurally safe during maneuvers and turbulence.
Analogy
Think of it like a chart comparing driving speed with how hard a car is being pushed through a turn. The faster the speed, the more force the vehicle may have to handle when the direction changes.
Grounding Statement
At slow speeds the wing runs out of lift before it can pull many Gs. At high speeds the wing can generate more Gs than the airframe is built to handle.
Intuition Check
Velocity does not mean any kind of motion here; it means aircraft airspeed. G loads do not mean cargo weight; they mean force on the aircraft measured in multiples of normal weight.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor used the Vg diagram to show how velocity versus G loads sets the boundaries of safe maneuvering for the aircraft.
Example Sentence 2
At higher airspeeds the velocity versus G loads curve allows greater load factors before the wings reach their limit.