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Recut flat cut sail worked better than one with curved foot and luff.

wrote:
The ideal sail shape is to have some good curve at the front of the
sail and have the sail get flat as it goes back. It is also good to
have the sails shape twist so the back edge (leech)angles further

from
the boom as it goes up. Lateen sails don't do this very well, they
just look neat.

An airplane wing is actually a good shape to model your sail after.
The top curved part of the wing being your sail shape.

A baggy sail is good in light wind sailing off the wind.

On 24 Apr 2005 20:03:29 -0700,
wrote:

Looked over the "more shapely" sail today and find that I can fold

over
the curved edges to yield a "flat cut" but I will have to add

grommets
between those I already have. This will look very odd but will be a
good test. While the first boat is being repaired from its mast

step
failure, we will experiment with the flat cut sail and the one with
some body to see which is best.
I attached the sails to the spars with cable ties and had them all

very
tight. I believe that by moving the sail outtward along a line
bisecting the gaff-boom angle and then using looser ties near the
gooseneck and loose ones at the outward end while having tight ones

in
the middle, I can achieve the effect of a flat cut. If this works,

I
will simply cut off a couple inches at the leech.