Here is an excerpt from correspondence between Annie Hill and Anthony Swanston, owner of Wild Fox, a Benford 37ft dory, which they have agreed may be published. It makes interesting reading.
(I've put a photo of Wild Fox in the Photo Gallery).
Hi Anthony,
I see you have cambered panels. You definitely need to do something about the diagonal creases and I suggest fitting running luff parrels - a lot kinder than Hong Kong parrels. It may make an appreciable difference to Wild Fox's performance.
Annie
Annie
We had correspondence about this when I was in Madeira in about October 2009. The cambered sails were a mistake. I do have a running luff parrel. It did not take the creases out. I fitted Hong Kong parrels and the tension on them broke the battens. I then put a slightly slack line from the luff end of the batten to the centre of the batten and attached the HK parrel to this - effectively spreading the load. The batten still broke.
Story over. Next time traditional flat sails...
You seem to have quite a bit more sail forward of the the mast than I have and perhaps that gives the running luff parrel more leverage to remove creases. I told Alan Martienssen I was against cambers. Even with the HK parrels the camber effect disappears as soon as you put a reefs in as the tension is progressively lost. Your 2009 view that cambers are OK for inshore sailing would seem to be correct.
Until I am happy with the rig and the balance issue I am on the fence about crossing the Pacific - the boat is a hard mouthed pig downwind in 20 plus knots...
Anthony
That's two ocean going schooners that have been disappointed with cambered panel sails. I think the common factor is schooner rig with high aspect ratio sails, and little balance area forward of the masts.