Having spent much of the last two weeks looking around Victor Winterthun's old IW31, Kari II, I decided to take a break from creating the very long job list and see how she sailed. I only had an hour and a half (an extended lunch break), but my 11 yr old and I got her out on the fjord in about ten knots of wind and raised five panels. Victor did not stint on sail area (48 sq m) and anyone who misses grinding a genoa sheet is welcome to haul it up - a workout that I compounded by not noticing that the forward end of the first four battens still had a sail tie around, so I was lifting pretty much the whole sail! Oops.
Once up, though, everything worked as it should, although the slightly zebra like pattern of the sail suggests a sail cover would not go amiss. She tacked smoothly through 90 degrees in flat water with tell tales flying well and no backing of the luff. No instruments aboard so I am not sure how much speed I gained by heading off a bit - something for next time. I have popped a few pictures into an album - not great pictures, but more will come.
There was one oddity though - on the first long tack out of harbour, on starboard, she displayed a noticeable lee helm. No real surprise, as the mast is well forward and I suspect that stronger wind or a full sail would have heeled us enough to neutralize it. However, when we tacked, the helm was perfectly balanced - so much so that I sailed across the fjord (about a mile) without touching the tiller. I tacked a couple more times to make sure and it was consistent - significant lee helm on starboard and none on port. Is this common? Can anyone explain?
Overall, I am very happy. The sailing was everything I hoped for, and the rest of the work just needs to be, like Arne said, split up into manageable chunks and done a bit at a time.
Mark