Matt,
Did you ever try to "close" the section? Meaning, use two pieces of sheet and put the seams together? Still not sure it would last, but if you did, could it have lasted longer than the open section? What aluminum were you using? Different grades/tempers take bending differently.
Smithson,
I still have a half dozen earth-anchors that turned out to be far to small to hold guy wires for a 40-foot tower. We all seem to start with some of the wrong stuff before zeroing in on the right stuff. What's next on your shopping list?
Everything made of wood should be treated with care.
Many things can cause a wind turbine to fail, don't get focused in on just one.
This example of a Jake that failed in Alaska, proving that spruce isn't a good material for blades, is kind of like saying aluminum shouldn't be used for aircraft because a Boeing 747 would break apart in an Immelman maneuver, or steel shouldn't be used for truck frames because a full load of gravel will bend a F-150 long-box. No, it's using a machine beyond the range that it was designed for that's to blame in the case of the Jacobs in Alaska. Under the conditions that I think he's talking about, neither spruce, fir, nor cedar would have held up, not without tuning or re-designing parts of the machine for the conditions.