I might be opening a Pandora’s box here, or show my own laxk of understanding, but here goes:
Yesterday I was sailing in 8-10 m/s winds, with moderate swell. With three and four panels the boat felt to be lacking drive, and suddenly I had the feeling that the top panel was acting mostly as a heeling vector.
To test this I lashed the upmost batten to the yard and hoisted the sail (while understanding that the slingpoint and YHP were far from optimal positions).
What happened blew me away.
The boat started to behave. It felt like the heel/drive -ratio (or whatever you call this) was way better than before, both with three and four panels. The change was also very apparent on the rudder pressure. The difference in the aggressive motion in following wind in a swell was also signifcant.
All in all, the boat sailed better and felt like a different boat.
What happened here?
The top panel has very little camber, maybe 2-4%. In this experimental sail the top panel has significantly more, and the shape is also more horizontal.
Is this the main component? Or the reduced twist (with the top batten now sheeted instead of batten two)?
Or is it just the sail area vs height, that reduces heeling?
The Galion has about 50% ballast, but a very modest draft (1-1.1m). Could it be that this boat just loves the drop in the sail height vs sail area so much, that the change is this dramatic?
I was going to leave the bottom panel away for the next season and cut about 70cm of the mast. Now it feels like I should drop the top panel, which would make it possible to cut even more (and further reduce the heeling momentum).
Aesthetics aside: what kind of risks or potential problems would I get? More stress on the yard?
What would I lose (along with Unalome, my sail insignia)?
Woul it be possible to gain the better sailing qualities while keeping the top panel?
(Disclaimer: the effect might have been caused by my misintepration, my mistakes while sewing the sail or doing the sheeting arrangement, me being a lousy JR-sailor or some other things.)