The tension/compression thing depends on how the wing is supported. If it's supported in the center then you have tension on top and compression on bottom. I'm assuming you meant that it was supported on the ends? And CF doesn't just have tensile strength. The fibers themselves have high tensile strength (they're useless in compression by themselves), but the matrix contributes a fair amount of compressive strength as well. And in addition to any bending stresses, there is also a load along the chord of a wing due to the aerodynamic moment about the quarter chord.n smikle wrote: When I see pictures of the inside of air plane wings they also have sections inside to strengthen it (Ribs?). So You would make multiple wing Ribs along the span. Of course the ribs are shaped like the wing profile. [Imagine bending the wing.. the top fibre is in compression and the bottom in tension.. the carbon fibre at the bottom i feel is supposed to be thicker because the main attribute of CF is it's tensile strength.
A lot of the bending stress is handled by the spar(s) running the span of the wing, while the outer skin is likely tailored more towards avoiding skin buckling as the wing does inevitably bend and flex. If they do in fact use unidirectional chord-wise (cannot verify that myself since I've never built a wing from CF) then I would suspect that would be a possible reason.