Hi John,
One of the problems with cross posting, is many of us don't follow the posts into another forum. Keep that in mind while asking questions on eng-tips.
If anyone is interested here is the tread to the post in the structural engineering fora: thread404-197304
A couple of things to point out. You will probably never get a "perfect" composite I Beam.
Concerning the buckling of the web:
Roark's (7th edition) pg 182 (paraphrased)
S= V/Aweb = unit load carried by a thin strip modeled as a Euler Column.
Bruhn (sec C5.8) defines formula for critical buckling of a flat plate in bending (elastic buckling) as:
Scr= ((Pi^2 * Kb * E)/12(1-nue^2))*(t/b)^2
Where Kb is the buckling coefficient (a graph is given) for various rations a/b (values range from 24 to 48)and edge restraint. (Glass fiber has a fairly high strain to failure ration). I'd give you a definitive answer if I knew the length of the beam.
Keep in mind that as I mentioned in a previous post, if your shear web is oriented at +/- 45 deg, the fibers are in alignment with the shear loads, therefore the fibers are in tension/compression. My experience with pultrusions are uni-fiber and that makes them poor shear members.
I don't really follow your attachment methods. We use adhesive bonding of shear webs to spar caps (usually composite as well in our case) using glass shear tapes. This method may or may not work for your application. Generally though, you can get a good metal-fiber bond with glass.
I recommend performing a test of your beam, if there is any concern.
Also, keep in mind that hand calcs with composites are difficult and generally need to be conservative. This should be somthing that could easily be fem'd.
Wes C.
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