Kurt Jon Ulmer wrote:Arne & David,
But gentlemen, they are not flat - they are Flat Enough.
Kurt
Dear Kurt, When I look at your photos of mehitabel's sails I get a peculiar feeling. My psychiatrist tells me I am suffering from an acute case of panel envy. Your sails looks so predictable. My sail is a bit like Jim Carrey's face, it can do wonderful things, but you never know what it is going to look like next time. Or more to the point what it is going to do. I have tamed it with Arne's throat hauling parrel but it needs to be tamed every time I lower it. Once it is up it sets very nicely and sails like a witch. Sometimes, when hoisting it in a swell and it is not restrained by the yard hauling and throat parrels, it flops all over the place, within the restraints of its fixed parrels. Perhaps if I had it set up like Arne's sail, with a full length yard, a vertical or possibly aft raking mast, short fixed batten parrels, a shortened boom and rubber hose extensions on the leech end of the battens to hold out the sheetlets, then I might become confident enough to sail with this sail at night. Right now, it is strictly a daysailing rig. But, oh, what a wonderful daysailing rig it is too. Arion is turbo charged, possibly sailing better that I did under the bermudian rig. I only had a working jib on a roller furler and my cambered sail gives a performance equivalent to a genoa I think. I am not very good with engines so I do like a rig that performs. But I also need a rig that I can handle with confidence on a dark, windy, squally night, when what keeps you safe is gear you know and trust. I cannot see this sail ever passing that test but I am still working on it. The flat Dacron sail I have has four fanned panels in the head which do give some camber, and the bottom two panels are in the form of a separate bonnet. I could build a bonnet with camber which will give me some light air performance. Once I have reefed the first two panels I will be back to a flat sail for heavy weather. This sail would be very similar to a flattish Fantail sail which I suspect offers the best compromise for offshore boats. If I had a bigger boat that needed a split rig, I would make it a schooner, with a large Fantail mainsail and a smallish, more conventional foresail, with flatish panels of course. I love the look of my black sail and am not planning to remove it just yet, it's just that, when I look at mehitabel I get this strange feeling, kind of painful but pleasant, it's confusing...