Scott wrote:
David,
Thank you for the suggestion to use load-spreading patches with the Odyssey material. If I understood correctly this would mean only two triangular patches. One in the upper most panel all the way aft (peak) and one in the upper most panel all the way forward (throat). Is my understanding of the throat and peak correct? I have to say that describing the material as having a 'high proportion of filler' is making me rethink using this as sail cloth. I am interested to know what cloth you personally recommend for a 22 sq ft sail.
Your understanding is correct. But use more than one patch in each place - two or three is usual at points of high stress, smaller patch first, then larger on top.
The conventional choice will always be polyester sailcloth, which after all's said and done is made for the job in hand. 4 -5 oz would be right for your boat. Most of them only come in 36in width, which is inconvenient if you want to get a whole panel out of one cloth. Boring white is available in 58in width. 4 oz in sailmaker's measure = 5 oz/sq yd. Sailmaker's measure means one yard of length at 28.5in wide - don't ask why, the reason is lost in the mists of time.
But we're not conventional, and there's a point in making junk sails from soft UV resistant cloth. These are heavier than 4 oz, but I don't have any problem with that - I'm using 9 oz/sq yd cloth on Weaverbird. Weathermax 80 is still a front runner, if you can work around its tendency to pucker when sewn along its length. That's easy if cutting a barrel-cut 2D panel lengthwise from one cloth, as the only sewing is along the batten seam, and puckering is actually good, as it gathers up some unwanted excess of length in the edge.