Nightmares?   Ring shank nails, the engineering is obvious, think of barbless fish hooks vs standard barbed versions.  Another thing is the wood used to make individual spars.  I have no knowledge of "grading" spar wood (more growth rings better?) The Spruce Goose (no spruce LOL).  Will a nail in one spar hold better than the same nail in another?  Finish?  Was the spar varnish of  good quality, new or from last years open can?  So many variables.  However I would think that most of our wood spars are stronger than they need to be with weight vs strength a balancing act that was born out of trail and error starting with our early bicycle makers and the others that followed.  Does a ring shank nail create multiple stress points upon entry vs a smooth shank? Think stop drilling in aluminum fractures. Who can figure the torque needed for a screw in a spar?  
  Two years ago I completed the Spar AD on a Cessna 177RG. The NDT firm I hired did work for NASA, Embry Riddle U, etc.  They would not schedule a test until the spar was cleaned and polished (shiny). It took 3 weeks to clean and polish the spar ( 4 hours per day) Micrometer, sand. micrometer, repeat........ Who tests your wood spar and what is their knowledge and experience?    Now another question.......who inspects your new metal spar etc.   Here in Florida a good thing to discover is the goo, that greenish gummy fluid that you find oozing from the aluminum  seams and on the hangar floor.  Do the new era ACA owners apply Corrosion X to their metals?
Like someone here posted, metal spars can corrode and fatigue.   How many YT videos have you seen of wood spared aircraft having their wings fold up under g loading?    C130 CALFIRE, Ag Plane, more?   I like wood but I do I buy a 40 year old GCBC with a12 year old factory metal spars because of the AD?  Or do I stay with wood?  You can bet I will examine a metal spar for surface corrosion but as far as fatigue/stress fractures..............you tell me.
What is a wood "Super Spar" ?   Thanks for the link to Rainbow Flying Services, enjoyed watching Ron break spars.