Stavanger, Sunday
I have followed Annie’s work with making and rigging ‘Fantail’s’ sail with interest on these fora. Just as with David Thatcher she seemed to spend a lot of time in getting the sail to stand well, and the sail still needs quite some attention to look fine. I also got the message that Shirley Carter with her Vertue, 'Speedwell', rigged with camber (shelf foot) in her Reddish style fan sail, has now modified her sail back to flat sail.
Their problems seem to stand in total contrast to the cambered panel HM style sails of medium AR that we make here in Stavanger. After having learned about the forces involved in these sails, it is now just a matter of sewing, rigging and then going sailing.
I am not sure, but I start to wonder if the HM-style sail could be better suited for use with camber than the fanned sails. The reason could be that the lower section with parallel battens and vertical luff and leech will be less prone to falling forward and distort the panels, provided that the important throat hauling parrel has been set up first. The HK-parrels are now reduced to lightly-loaded trimming lines. Also, the HM sail keeps the yard fully peaked up until one is down on 3 panels (in my case) and this 3-panel top section is then really useful, even upwind in a blow.
After having experienced, yet again, this summer, how straightforward the construction and rigging process is, on 'Edmond Dantes’ new sail (..the whole project took less than a month...), I see no reason for making radical changes. Construct the sail, rig the sail, and go sailing, period. That procedure suits me fine.
Cheers, Arne
PS: It could well be that a typical offshore traveller is better off with a flat sail, but that is another story. Offshore travellers are in their own league and thrashing to windward against 3m+ seas is not for decent cruising people (..still, I have never heard about Bm-rigged offshore boats not having any camber in their sails...).