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You're quoting some uncommonly low strength values from various sources, Vince. Thats me trying to be polite which is most unnatural for me. The easy way to determine the bending strength of a a piece of wood is to clamp lightly in bench vise measure up a distance, pull it to failure with a fish scale. I did that and got 11,780 psi one direction and 8,330 psi the other. There should be pic attached. Then weigh a little piece on the digital scale. Anyone can do this with a material they see in lumber yard. I'd say the accuracy of my crude set up is 10%. If my explanation below is not clear to anyone, please pipe up. My point, if there is one, is: test YOUR wood, test YOUR glued joints .
The applicable equations for the size sample you use are:
I = b times h cubed divided by 12 I = moment of inertia in lbs/sq in b = base dim in inches h = height dim in inches
S = M times c divided by I S = stress in lbs/sq inch M = bending moment = dist from vice up to spring scale times the spring scale reading in lbs c = half the distance from the compression side to the tension side of your piece
My sample of Stika Spruce from Aircraft Spruce was .5 by .262 failed with 1.125 lb in the weaker axis and 1.5 lb in the stronger axis, applied 6 in up. The fish scale doesn't show as such in the pic