Tubes are great for tensile and compressive loads....bending not so much. Which is why most tube structures are trust like.
Yup. For a given mass of aluminum, forming it into an I-beam will carry more bending load than forming it into a tube. This is engineering 101, for greatest moment of inertia, distribute your material as far from the centroid as possible, for the given loading direction.
However, forming it into a tube spar instead of a more typical built-up I-beam spar requires fewer detail parts, fewer fasteners, fewer manufacturing operations, and less labor. A tradeoff of weight for cost.
The biggest issue I'd have with a tube spar is hidden corrosion. ...from the inside out.
When you pull the wingtip off the Grumman, the inside of the spar is easily inspectable. I have heard of some minor corrosion on the ID, but never anything that could cause the spar to be scrapped. It is also really easy to fog with your preferred anti-corrosion treatment.
The really important place to inspect the Grumman spar for corrosion is directly below the wing walk, on the outer top surface of the spar. 40 years of fatass pilots climbing in, and the fiberglass wing-walk fairing sagging from solar heating, can cause the wing walk to remain in contact wih he top of the spar. Water can get trapped between the surfaces and start corrosion. Easy to inspect for if you know to do it, there is a large inpection panel right below the problem area.
I have heard of a few center spars being scrapped for this reason, and there are currently no new ones available. The factory/ type certificate owner has talked about a production run, but expects they would need to sell for $12,000 to be profitable in the expected sales quantity... as of August 2014.