Graham
What you say, below, indicates that you think the load will be lighter on a flat sail than on a cambered one. I am not so sure if that is the fact, or need to be:
Take a close look at Johanna’ s sail. It is made with about 8% camber (much less in the top panels), using the simple barrel cut method with no broad-seaming. To let the sail bulge to maximum camber, I, after a while, slackened the sail as much as 10cm (1.7%) along each batten. As a result, I got a bit extra camber, but I also, without thinking of it then, relieved the sail from quite some tension in each panel’s corners. The ’smiling’ wrinkles you spot along each batten is not stress wrinkles, but ‘slack wrinkles’. To me this seems to have been very kind to the sail. If one is put off by those untidy wrinkles, one can use Slieve McGalliard’s or David Tyler’s refined barrel cut method, adding 3(?) broadseams along each batten.
See how the two Davids did it here to make Footprint’s sail (under Documents and David Tyler's files):
http://www.junkrigassociation.org/members_files
Two factors should indicate that flat sails see less stress:
· The flat shape produces less force for the same area.
· The flat sail will not flip-flop back and forth as the boat is rolling in calm winds.
However, a baggy panel can take the wind force with less tension, simply because it is baggy. Just imagine a slack line (to balance on) and a similar taut one. If a tension-meter were fitted to both, the slack line would show a lot lower tension.
I do repeat, and I do stress: On cambered panel sails the fitting of boltropes must be taken seriously. They must not stretch, and they must stand up to sun, rain or whatever.
Sooo...
this is what I recommend to do to make a cambered sail last:
· Find a sail material with the best sun- and chafe-resistance that you can afford. Form stability is of less importance - the panels will not blow out of shape.
· Build camber into the sail, using the barrel method. If you fear you get eye-sore of looking at the wrinkles along the battens, add broadseams to take away about 1.5 – 2% along each batten before assembling the sail along the battens..
· If the simple barrel-only method is used, rig the sail with some slack (1.5-2%) along the battens.
· Pad the batten pockets at the mast well.
· Do not use metal eyelets anywhere, much better with webbing hoops which spreads the loads.
· Add tablings (1 – 3 layers) along luff and leech if you are to do serious offshore sailing. They are not meant to act as boltrope. Their mission is to make the luff and leech stiffer and heavier and thus reduce wear, caused by fluttering (of reefed panels).
· Fit a good boltrope around the whole sail. If in doubt, double it along the leech.
· Make an easy-to-use sail cover, which quickly can be dropped over the sail, in harbour. If that still is too awkward to use, just make a “sail bundle-end bag” so at least the luff and leech areas are protected.
Cheers, and good luck,
Arne.
PS: Even if one is to make a flat sail, I recommend adding a boltrope and some tabling, to reduce the likelihood of fluttering and tearing the luff/leech.