Web handling is germane to a diverse set of industries, including pape
r, polymer, textile, and sheet metal processing. Angular misalignment
of the guides used to position a web in its transport system generates
non-uniform in-plane forces that can result in transverse buckling of
the web, even for misalignments as small as a fraction of a degree. I
n this paper, the state of stress, the associated in-plane deformation
, out-of-plane vibration, and stability of webs with misaligned guides
are investigated experimentally and theoretically. The onset of edge
buckling, in which transverse corrugations are present along an entire
free edge or are localized near a guide, is governed by the stability
of a relatively high mode of the nominally aligned web. Two models of
common web transport components - termed ''free sliding'' and ''edge
guided'' - are developed and discussed in the light of laboratory meas
urements for predicting and bounding critical buckling angles.