The sails you made for Badger have 6% camber, doesn't seem like a lot for light to moderate breezes. (I roughly measured the main on our bermudan sloop to have roughly 10% camber). Is there any problem making them at 8%?
Also, Arne uses a chain hanging on a wall to figure out camber. How do you do it for your shelf foot design?
Gary,
No, 6% isn't a lot. The camber can be set at anything between 0% and 10%, but the more the camber, the bigger the problems in getting it to set well and look nice, and the worse it looks when there is no wind. If that bothers you. I'm happy to stick at 6% for a serious cruising boat. Arne uses 10% for an inshore boat, but I feel nervous about having a lot of loose cloth around; it's getting to be a bit too un-chinese for my peace of mind.
The shelf foot is simply drawn to the shape that you think the camber ought to be, because it should set more or less perpendicular to the panel itself. I draw a straight line for the after half of the edge of the shelf, tangent to a circular arc forming the forward half of the edge. A straight line from luff to leech, between each end of the edge, is where the batten will lie, and you can mirror the edge of the shelf about this straight line to obtain a lens-shaped piece of cloth. This is stitched between two panels, and the batten arrangements added.