Manuevering speed is that speed at or below which full, coordinated, abupt control inputs will not result in permanent deformation of the airframe. In such cases, the airplane will either successfully complete the manuever, or it will stall (thereby relieving the flight loads.) It is arrived at by comparison of design flight loads against actual loads imposed during such manuevers, and relating them to loads incurred during 45 fps gusts during the manuever. If it is not possible to apply full, abrupt inflight control inputs without damage to the airplane or exceeding design load factors, then a manuevering speed is not published.
The Swift has no published manuevering speed. Manuevering speed is not mentioned in the Swift TCDS. One cannot simply derive one because it would be convenient to have it coincide with the top of the green arc. The Swift is placarded against
any aerobatic manuever. Unlike the Cessna 170, the Swift is not approved for Spins, simple Chandelles, Lazy eights, or even Steep turns. Some Swift owners would like to convince others that because the Swift looks like a some fighter airplanes that it is capable of certain fighter-like manuevers. They like to claim that the only reason a Swift isn't approved for aerobatics is because the maker didn't want/couldn't afford the costs of such certification. Baloney.
The reason Swifts are placarded against any aerobatics is because the maker didn't want/couldn't afford the costs of design and manufacture necessary to make the airplane safely manueverable even in mild aerobatics. The airplane was already too heavy for it's original horsepower and the alterations and strength necessary to make the airplane aerobatic would have driven it beyond the limits. Later horsepower upgrades didn't address the problems of strength and unpredictable handling in unusual attitudes the airplane suffers.
A barrel roll is certainly a 1-G manuever if properly performed. The airplane doesn't know about it. Only a conscientious and intelligent pilot would know if he's violating the airworthiness certificate limitations, if the manuever is properly performed. The legality of a particular manuever is the responsibility of the pilot. I'm not trying to be the judge of that. I'm only addressing the issues of relative strength and flying qualities of the two airplanes.
Do you imagine for a moment that a manufacturer of an airplane capable of aerobatics wouldn't at least have the airplane approved for Accelerated stalls, Chandelles, or Steep Turns even? The makers of the Swift said "No." The test pilots said, "No." The airworthiness authorities said "No." (I used to have an instructor who'd ask, "What part of - "No" - don't you understand?")

The Swift does not have a manuevering speed listed for a reason. It's the same reason it's placarded "
No Aerobatic Manuevers".
Unlike the Cessna 170.
This msg thread is way off topic.