After some thought I'll say that his name is Mike Williams and I wrote up a description of his methods when I was at Boeing in about 1996 (there was a real need to understand his methods) and than again several times, last in about 2010, more for fun... If I can find it I'll post it but subsequent moves make that hard. He would do about three pages of hand calcs which would take about three weeks to interpret but at the time got positive margins quickly. Years later this drove the salvage people nuts (they dreaded finding MW on a damaged part's calcs sheets) (and me when we were designing the next model which was based on the one he worked on) but must have pleased his design-stressing leads immensely at the time. Brilliantly beautiful and what made it beautiful made it dangerous... Like high explosive, use with care and only when its limitations are fully understood. Representing point loads by a pressure has obvious non-conservatism so make sure margins are ample and make sure you do a simple FE ananysis for the final iteration. MW used a pressure but it would have been safer to use a central point load equal to the sum (provided margin was positive). I've no doubt that MW chose the method that gave a good result and was in his opinion safe. No part I'm aware of him working on ever gave trouble, but...