I hate that, I wake up in the middle of the night and it's a long and busy day tomorrow and I'm building a boat in my head instead of going back to sleep :(
I wonder if there's a list of special jargon for proas somewhere, it can make things confusing to discuss.
I tend to think of the ends as port and starboard, when the end of the proa on the skippers left is forward the wind is coming in over what would be the port rail in a tacking rig, so port tack, port shunt, port bow, same for the starboard bow, not that it really matters among shunters, but we need to keep in mind that tackers aren't going to know what's going on :).
I never thought of the topping lifts either, in fact I decided early on that since a shunting rig has a shorter range of roatation, about 160 degrees (Close hauled to close hauled both on the leeward side) rather than 180 degrees like a tacking rig (port beam reach to starboard beam reach) that there was no reason to rotate the mast, hmm.
I must be missing something, in the picture I've got in my head the "Chimney" that Blondie Hasler talks about in the PJR on the side of the mast opposite the sail should still be viable on a shunter, about the only problem I can see would be when you need to take the sail bundle off the mast.
I'm not sure how Russell works his rudders, but I've seen daggerboards with a block above them with a line down to the handle, give a tug on the line and the board comes up, a second line tied off at the deck on one side of the board runs up and through a deadeye at the top of the board and down to a block on the deck on the opposite side of the daggerboard, give a tug on the line and the board goes down, lines could be run to the cockpit, should work well on the rudders Russell uses.
Russell has said he's never had any damage to rudders an any of his proas, I suppose if one did get wrecked you could move the other back and forth till you made repairs if they're not single sided like a leeboard, but they are bloody expensive, the ones for Wet N' Wild were $1400 usd each if I recall, and tough to DIY. I don't think I want to try them either, there's a 50 acre log boom about 100' from where I put my boat in the water, the main reason my leeboard'll kickup :)
I kind of wondered about the asymmetrical hulls, I've read why they started using them but it seems like there are easier ways, I suppose there weren't at the time someone came up with the idea.
I'm still not sure what I'll need for a rudder, if the sliding leeboard works well then I can probably get by fine with a steering oar, but if I ever want to use an autopilot I guess I'll need real rudders, and probably something fairly robust, and probably two auto steerers...
I'd like to have a yuloh. just makes sense since the proa already has the raised deck you need to use one well, be nice for quietly leaving a marina early in the morning.
I've been playing around with what to use for a rudder, oddly enough much what you're thinking, a pair of "kick-up rudders on sticks" but deployed off the trampoline between the hulls and operable either from the "Bench" or a hatch like Blondie Hasler used on his boats to handle the rig from inside the boat.
I actually don't post anywhere else, this seems to be the only place I can ask questions about a rig I'm interested in without someone telling me I'm an idiot and to just go out and buy the most expensive bermudan rig I can afford...
I'll probably go a bit wider too, I think most of Russels proas have a length to beam ratio of around 20/1 I'm thinking maybe 12/1, so if I build the 29 1/2 footer I'd like to it'd have a 28' waterline, and a 28" beam.
Bill