Scott, you wrote, “is it strictly for the young steely-eyed edgy racers that you and Edward have become?”
Is this the image we project? Ouch!
Young? I've been receiving my pension for over 20 years. Steely-eyed? Both my eyes are scheduled for surgery in the next 2 months to clear my vision. Edgy? I drive in the middle of the road. Racers? My last serious boat race was over 35 years ago. Currently I am only competing in the human race, and not very successfully. Edward was probably born about the same time as I was, so I think you may have got the wrong impression. My wife laughed when I read out your words above.
The batten parrels stop the battens moving forward and if you try that with the model you might be surprised at how it works. I sometimes just hoist the sail and ignore the downhauls as the batten parrels are short and go sailing. I do recall sailing on one day and only handling the halyard and sheet. In action nothing seems critical.
I drew the batten rise at 5° for aesthetic reasons, but reckon none is needed. The bottom batten has to be at least half of the panel depth above the turning points at the foot of the mast for the spanned downhauls to work, so there is no problem seeing under the rig. On Poppy I simply have ring bolts at the base of the mast for the downhauls, so no great tension can be set from the cockpit.
The split junk was conceived to overcome the inefficiencies of the accepted cruising junk rigs. It has been entered in the ISC class division of the Island Race which is for club cruisers to have a fun day out, simply to get a good comparison of performance with similar sized cruising boats. Unfortunately a few sailors do race to win and buy high tech sails and some even import professional sailors in their lust for line honours. The only concession to racing has been to make all panels split on Amiina for local club racing. There is no reason why the rig should not ocean cruise like a Bermudan rigged boat if the normal considerations for a jib are observed. I still recommend that the storm sail panels are not split for serious cruising, until we know more.
As the split junk was a completely new idea I was fairly conservative with the jib parameters to start with, but it would seem we can push things further. The 12°/ 10% sheeting angle/ camber seems to set well and give even better lift/drag, and as there is no point in not getting the best L/D ratio even on a cruising rig then it seems to be the way to go. It might be worth considering more, but I haven't tried to draw that up yet. We're still learning.
I guess that for serious cruising UV would be a greater consideration than strength of material. The 2.2oz nylon we used has a ripstop thread which is similar to the normal thread in a 6oz cloth, so should be strong enough for the sort of sailing that Edward is doing. There just doesn't seem to be any stress on the material as the luff and leech carry the stresses, and they have fairly conventional construction.
I'm off to bed (to rest my steely eyes),
Cheers, Slieve.