Jim wrote:
Any comments?
Arne, do you remember either of these?
Jim, I remember that you mentioned this not so long ago. My answer is still that spherical contact is unnecessary, as the longitudinal force is not that great. Further, rubbing contact between two aluminium surfaces is bad; they fret and gall each other. Did you actually make these and sail any distance with them? I couldn't make them on a simple home lathe, I'd need to get them made, very expensively, by a CNC turning company. A simple flange suffices.
Jim and Arne, are you both "armchair sailing" on this topic? Have you done any more than talk about it and observe what others have done?
Just to go back briefly over my own practical experience:
I collaborated with Maurice Donovan on his early trials with hinges. Since then, I've made hinges of various types for Ivory Gull, Tystie and Weaverbird. I've sailed with hinges for many thousands of miles, and can claim to know something about them. The design of the batten pockets is important, and method B would be very poor - a symmetrical pocket that "bulges" equally on both sides of the sail is best as far as the hinges are concerned, but that brings with it some difficulties in carrying the vertical tension in the sail, so I have settled on a pocket design that bulges only a little on the reverse side, but mainly on the batten side, as the best compromise. I drill a hole across the flange from side to side to thread a small line through, as it is a very difficult turning job to drill an axial hole the length of a hinge. I use a line to assemble two hinges and a short central portion of batten tube, so that assembly is easier, but have found that it is not necessary to have a line from end to end of the batten if the pocket design is good. I aim for a length of contact of three times the tube diameter, which means that the total length of a hinge for 38mm tube is going to be in the order of 250mm long. I have found that a half angle of 5 degrees is safe, against wedging itself apart. I have made, but have not yet proved, hinges with a half angle of 6 degrees - this is just achievable with the same length of engagement of three times the tube diameter. I have found that nylon 66 is strong enough and resistant enough to fatigue. Other less expensive plastics are not.
I reiterate - this is practical experience in the design, manufacture and use of hinges, and not just armchair theorising and second hand knowledge from two decades ago about what can be made, what works and what is strong enough.