Definition
The maximum speed at which application of full or abrupt flight control inputs about a single axis will not cause structural damage to the airplane, expressed at the airplane's current operating weight. VO is established by the manufacturer for airplanes certificated under newer airworthiness standards and is generally lower than VA (design maneuvering speed). At or below VO, the airplane will stall before flight loads can exceed its structural limits.
Plain English
The fastest speed at which you can make a sudden, full control input in one direction without risking damage to the airplane. Below this speed, the wing will stall before the airframe is overstressed.
Context Anchor
You may see VO in the airplane flight manual, pilot’s operating handbook, or discussions of accelerated stalls and maneuvering limits.
Derivation
The 'V' in V-speeds stands for velocity. The 'O' stands for operating, distinguishing this speed from VA, which is a design value. VO is published as an operating limit the pilot uses, while VA was historically a structural design figure.
Why Pilots Care
It defines the safe speed range for maneuvering so that abrupt inputs or gusts do not overload the structure.
Intuition Check
Do not treat VO as a “safe speed for any maneuver.” It applies to limited maneuvering protection, not repeated yanking, rolling and pulling at the same time, or careless control use.
Example Sentence 1
Before entering the area of reported turbulence, the pilot slowed to VO to protect the airframe from gust loads.
Example Sentence 2
In rough air the instructor reminded the student to maintain VO or below so turbulence would not overstress the wings.