Edward, and Slieve
Remember, I am not restricted by racing handicap ratings. I can see your point of being area-restrictive to compete well, and it would surprise me if a 20sqm Johanna-style sail could keep up with a 20sqm Mk II Split Junk.
I notice now that the Splinter 21 has been given a quite light keel, only 400kg (32%), versus Malena’s 600kg (42%). Pity that. The Splinter, with her slim lines, looks to me to be a boat which would have thrived with a 600kg keel; boiling along at 25-30° heel.
I guess the reason why I stick to my (second best?) rig is - besides laziness - that I find it easier to understand and thus make my sails, and also to describe to others how to do it. In addition, I like to be able to remove any sail-to-hull imbalance by adjusting the sail-to-mast balance during trial sails.
I still remember the dramatic boost in upwind-performance I experienced when the flat sail of Malena was given 10% camber (hinges, 1991). The actual progress to windward may have leapt up as much as 20%, and even more in light winds. During one match-race against a Bermuda-rigged sister boat, Malena went both faster and closer to the wind. In my head, it seems unlikely that there will be another 5% to gain from a split junk. On the other hand, for racing, even 3% speed gain is the difference between winning and losing (about 1min48s pr. hour).
Slieve, your way of sailing sounds very much like mine. The trimming lines I use (THP, YHP and FUP) are generally not touched between reefing and un-reefing the sail. The sheet forces are no doubt higher on my low-balance sails than on a SJ, but as long as I can tack without touching anything, except the tiller, I think I am fine.
One thing I wonder about is that I cannot spot any telltales on Amiina’s new sail. I find the leech telltales I fit to be very useful, both to avoid over-sheeting the sail, and to check that the twist is right.
Cheers, Arne
PS: And yes, sailing back into the finger berth is something I too do frequently. On Broremann I even used to tack my way out between the rows of expensive yachts...