In terms of testing a model wing there are several things that must be considered to make the test worthwhile. First you must determine the flight loads on your model. Brett suggested 15g's as a baseline. If you can estimate what radius corner your plane will execute, it can be calculated. Then it can be compared to your max CL and wing size to see if that is possible. You need to balance these two. Next you must determine the span wise distribution of that lift. Constant is too conservative. For setting up the load fixture to apply the loads you will also need the chord wise distribution. It is not accurate to distribute it evenly chordwise, as that is not how it works.
For my testing, I presumed the lift distribution was elliptical. I didn't try it, but if you assume each square inch shares the lift equally, or spread it equally, 15gs will almost certainly break any normal construction. I was not interested looking at the ultimate strength, but the way it distorted/warped when loaded. For this, you also need to deal with the chordwise lift distribution. I never figured out how to estimate that, so I just shifted it fore/aft
So, you have a (nearly) point load of the fuselage (15g x mass of fuselage)+ the total lift distrbuted spanwise, and somehow arranged chordwise.
This was a Imitation wing built 3 different ways - foam, D-tube (with construction nearly identical to a Nobler), and an I-beam. The Foam and D-tube were monokote, the I-beam was covered with GM silkspan to give it a chance. Qualitative results were:
Foam - least total deflection, least dihedral, and very small warps no matter how you arranged the weight chordwise
D-Tube - small total deflection, small dihedral. Warped to "wash out" no matter how you arranged the weight chordwise, but almost didn't care about which way you put the mass on in chord.
I-beam - very large deflection to the point I thought it might break, usually warped towards wash-out, but varied greatly depending on where you put the weight chordwise.
At the time, I could build these size airplanes at about upper-40s/low 50s, and I was supporting one half of the wing in a cradle while cantalievering the other one. So the total weight was about 22.5 lbs distributed as indicated. I was pretty impressed how much it deflected, even the foam deflected maybe 3/4" and the I beam actually bottomed out on the bench, at about 1.5", so I had to go back and shim the cradle higher.
An arguable defect of the experiment is that I (consciously) disregarded the weight of each wing, although they weren't greatly different. I figured it was built how I could built it, and that the wing was maybe 20% of the total weight of the airplane, and I was looking to confirm my guess that foam warped less, more than trying to save weight or shave it as close as I could. I was looking for construction that varied the least under load*, and was at least a viable weight.
A 625 square inch airplane at 48 ounces with an ST46 was about the low end of what people were doing at the time, and while some people might do a little lighter, I reasoned that the consistency would make mine easier to fly and stay that way from day-to-day better than others - some of which were gangbusters one day, and a disaster the next weekend. I still think that, and I still think it is worth a few ounces here and there to make sure I am not continually chasing whatever structural variabilty there is (day to day or airplane to airplane).
Brett
*a concept of robustness not from model airplanes, full-scale aviation, spacecraft design (although it applies there, too...) but from a completely tangential area - stereo amplifier design! It's why you can get a Pioneer or Yamaha amplifer with .0005% total distortion, but it doesn't sound too good compared to something very much more modest design (say a Dynaco ST-150) with 1% distortion. It's because it is very easy to design an amplifier with low distortion driving a (very specially constructed) 8 ohm resistor and not nearly as easy to drive a real loudspeaker with all sorts of reactive loads varying all over the place with time and frequency. A really good transistor or hybrid amplifier might also make a good arc welder, need 10 amps, no problem.