David T wrote:
“If I recall correctly, Slieve, you designed your sail with some convexity in the luff, so that it would want to set better without so much intervention in the form of
Hong Kong
parrels or running luff parrels, and this seems to have been justified, if you only have to use one
Hong Kong
parrel.”
Yes, David, I built an open frame model rig and let the battens find their natural balance with a curved leech and curved luff, and copied that into the full size rig. My argument was that the tight leech pushes the battens forward and it requires a tight but curved luff to push them back and find equilibrium. The mistake I made was to not allow for the downward pull of the sheet, which is most pronounced when close hauled. (Remember I sheet the split junk tighter than normal junks as the camber of the 'jibs' allows me to point higher).
In practice there is little need for HKs when the sheet is eased, but when close hauled I feel I really need some form of peak halyard to top the yard up against the pull of the sheet, and intend to experiment in this area. I believe there is a lot to learn by making frame model rigs to get the structure right, and filling in the cloth after the rig has been designed. Vincent Reddish reminded us that the Chinese built the frame and tensioned it before filling in the gaps with cloth. I feel that too many ‘adjusting’ lines are an indication of a poorly designed structure, and some of the ‘90s rigs are a knitter’s nightmare. Rig designers should KISS.
Cheers
Slieve