On Sunday I did some more trials of sailing Tammy Norie with her sail lashed well forward.
Firstly, I improved and tightened my knots around the mast so that the battens were held closer on the starboard tack. I also rigged a downhall on my lowest batten so that i could tighten the sail reefed. This definitely improved that tack, which is usually Tammy's bad track. It seems that allowing the sail to curve away from the mast is bad and reduces drive.
I sailed four tacks from Portsmouth to Ryde in a steady F5 with a moderate chop. I set my wind vane to sail about 70° off. There was a spring current with the wind so I made very little windward progress, which suited my purpose quite well!
I sailed close hauled with the bottom panel reefed. I sailed two tacks with half the top triangle (as described earlier) and two with the whole triangle. There may have been a slight increase in weather helm with the full triangle but there was no increase in speed. Its not clear that the top panel is achieving anything.
In general she made 3.5 to 4 knots steadily with better weather helm than usual. The chop was slowing her down (as usual) but she was retaining enough momentum to keep going. This is an improvement. I would normally expect 2.5 to 3 knots with frequent stopping slaps in these conditions.
There was an increased reluctance to tack. I missed two tacks and had to bear off to gain momentum. This isn't unusual in choppy water, but it did seem worse than usual.
Back in harbour on smoother water with half the top triangle I was quite startled at how gusts seemed to pick her to and surge her forward, rather than just knock her over. It was much closer to the feeling you get from a Bermudan.
Again, very promising and worth a try if you have a similar sail.