My interpretation of your question is this:
- At 0 horizontal velocity, an aircraft needs to provide 100% of its weight in upward force to maintain its altitude.
- At orbital velocity, with the surface of the Earth curving away
exactly as fast as the aircraft falls, it needs to provide 0% of is
weight in upward force to maintain altitude.
- The question: For an aircraft traveling at 14% of
orbital velocity, does it only need to provide 100%-14% = 86% of its
weight in upward force to maintain its altitude, or is the calculation
different?
If this interpretation is good, please consider editing your question to clarify.
I heard that the SR-71 traveled at about 14% of orbital velocity,
Earth orbital velocity is ~7700 m/s; 14% would be 1080 m/s, or ~2410 mph. Wikipedia tells me the SR-71's maximum speed is 2200 mph; close enough.
It would only need to accelerate upwards 86% of craft at rest.
At orbital velocity, the downward curvature of the Earth as you go forward exactly matches your falling speed, so that you don't need to accelerate upwards to maintain altitude. However, it's not a linear relationship.
Centripetal acceleration is the inward acceleration needed to maintain a circular path, and the formula for it is $v^2 / r$. When $v$ is $v_{orbit}$ (orbital velocity for any given altitude), then by definition the acceleration is the same as $g$, the acceleration under Earth's gravity. When $v$ is below orbital velocity, $g$ is too large, so you need to cancel some of it out with upward acceleration, i.e. lift some of your own weight. At $v$ = ${0.14} \times {v_{orbit}}$, you'd want to accelerate downward at ${0.0196} \times {g}$ to maintain a circular path, so you need to cancel all but that much of the natural gravitational fall, and still lift 98% of your weight.