Regarding the previous posting, give me a two-masted rig any time. At my age I wouldn't like to be messing around with a single sail on a 39 foot boat. Regret I didn't really understand the comment about the 'shape' being better on a two-master. The point about a two masted rig is surely that the boat can be kept balanced by reefing each sail differently if you need to?
As to cambered sails tending to bend things more than flat panels, I can vouch for that. On our previous flat-panelled junk schooner (Sunbird 32 'Matanie' for sale again I see at:
junk schooner for sale, nothing to do with me, but would like to see her go to a good home) we bent nothing in 30 years. Though we weren't adventurous ocean-crossing types we did have our fair share of rough stuff and the rig always handled superbly. Having this year converted our subsequent boat 'Paradox' to a cambered panel schooner junk we managed to bend the main boom and yard in our first sail in F4-5 gusting 6, so it looks as if with cambered sails the moral is go for the next size up...
David, not having even the world's worst engineering brain, it was taking me a while to figure out why you gave Annie's sail a convex luff. Your last post explaining that the aim is to increase the effect of the LHPs is beginning to make sense, and is something I'll keep in mind as a way of attacking creasing (though I think your idea of two LHPs in the appropriate places may well do the trick, perhaps with the odd light HK parrel or two).
Has anyone tried hauling a cambered foresail in tight to help reduce rolling etc, eg when motor sailing? Worked well with a flat sail but I imagine ca,mbered will flap around a bit when at or almost head to wind.
And finally, er, has anyone tried double 'HK' parrels per panel, i.e. one crossing the sail conventionally, fore-aft, and the other running aft-fore, thus giving a 'cross' pattern per panel? (OK, I just had a large glass of Sangria. Chin chin)