Ok, many of you are asking for more details concerning the real problem. I posted it here, simplified, just to see if I might get a few ideas about solutions. Anyway, the real problem I am trying to solve is: can you make a rigid (helicopter) rotor blade out of wood, rigid hub, all bending stress resolved in the wood blade itself.
The horizontal component force is actually a distributed load of F = m*w^2*r (centrifugal force) where the blade is a NACA 63-015 airfoil but for simplicity you can probably just use an elliptical shape of 5 in by 0.75 in since it is a 5 in chord 15% thick. Specific gravity of the wood is 0.45, E is 1.63x10^6psi, compression/tension max stress is 7,200 psi. The lift Force (vertical force) is L= 1/2*rho*v^2*CL*C*r. I was figuring a max lift CL of 1.2, C = 5 in and I was using a 9 ft (108in) span, r for the radius. To find the actual forces you must integrate both equations with respect to r so dF= m*w^2*dr and m is a function of r and dL = 1/2 rho*w^2*r^2*C*CL*dr. Integrate both sides of both equations, blah blah blah, hopefully you get it...
Also, you could use a different wood that its mechanical properties might be better but again, the goal is to see if a rigid rotor blade made from wood is possible and feasible. Wood is natures great composite structure and it has a wonderful strength to weight ratio, especially when you consider that because of how light (and weak) it is you end up with a larger cross section to get the needed strength, typically, and when you consider the larger cross section's larger moment of inertia you get a strength of very high value and a weight of very low value...
Of course you have the option to strengthen the blade root with doublers. You will find that the tip of the blade (at max CL) wants to deflect to about 12 degrees and the root about 8 degrees with the distributed loads specified.
The horizontal load remains horizontal for any deflection but the vertical load technically is always perpendicular to the blade span. Although I think you could just calculate it as always vertical and it would be close enough...
Well it's more of an exercise because I am curious, but what the heck...