Stavanger, Monday
Gary
There is one thing that puzzles me: Over and over I read about people who spend hundreds, not to say thousands of hours building their dream boat, but when it comes to making the sails, they either leave the job to a sail maker, or in the JR context; the junk sail has to be built so terribly fast.
I claim that you will only save 20hours (at most) on making an inferior (flat) sail compared to stepping up to a reasonably well-setting cambered sail. My first cambered sail for Malena (32sqm) took me just 40hours to make. To everyone’s and my own surprise this sail held for over 15 years until the canvas itself died from sunrot. If I were to make a flat sail for Malena now, I cannot see how I could possibly save as much as 10hours work compared to using my barrel cut method of making a cambered panel sail. The barrel cut method is indeed a quick and dirty method which involves some untidy wrinkles along the battens. It’s the way it is.
So you think lashing and grommets will save you time? Sorry mate, you will not. If you want the grommets to hold, then you will have to hand-stitch them in place. Takes forever. If you just bang them in place, then they will soon get ripped out.
Flat sail: If you want to use a soft cloth and just let the camber "happen", the Chinese way, remember this:
1) Fit a stiff boltrope around the sail. You will not get any camber if the whole sail stretches including the edges of the sail.
2) What we call soft canvas, for instance Odyssey III, is not soft in this Chinese JR context and will not stretch enough to produce a natural camber.
One very quick method to get some camber in a flat sail is to insert tucks at luff (and possibly leech). Then the sail should be made over-size so as to get the right size when the tucks have crimped it (or you may add a panel later). Se NL 26 p.14
Anyway, good luck with your project!
Arne