It is of great interest to me that both Arne and David have suggested a move back to the Poppy design (which remains a classic in my mind, and probably the initial inspiration for most of those who have gone down the SJR road.) Even more interesting to me, is that Arne’s current proposal is evolved to the point where it has lost the soft beauty of the Poppy sail – and now almost (not quite) resembles the Amiina Mk1 sail !
In other words, Arne and David may be marching the evolution of the SJR backwards towards its starting point, with more panels, lower aerodynamic balance and greater rise-angle of batten. I imagine this will not please Slieve, who has been leading the way in the other direction. But that’s OK – we are always going to need "horses for courses" - and I don’t mean “backwards” in any derogatory sense, only in the sense of time. I make the point that both of these earlier SJR rigs worked well, and I have no doubt the recent suggestions of Arne and David would work well too, and if one proves better than the others, it is likely to be by such a small amount that we may never know. Personally, for my purposes I can find no fault with the Amiina Mk2 rig and I think I’ll be sticking with it. In fact all the cambered junk rigs work so well, that no-one yet really knows which is best. (I’d put my money on David’s recent junk wing sail, but the question of which is the highest performing junk plan form is a whole ‘nother question, probably as potentially fruitless as the dinghy design competition and for the same reasons. Horses for courses, remember?) Discussions generally don’t revolve much around actual performance, they all perform well these days, but more around questions of handling, rigging detail, sail making, mast placement, structural issues etc.
I have taken the liberty of adding two more sail plans onto Arne’s “Three split junk rigs” and if Slieve gives his permission I will put a larger version and hopefully open up a new discussion. It rather strikes me as an illustration of an evolutionary process. (You are going in the right direction Arne - just two more iterations to go, and you have almost caught up!)

(On this illustration the Amiina Mk1 sail (second from the right) is not to the same scale as the Mk2 - its zoom-fitted here for mast height and to illustrate shape. In reality it is a little larger than the Mk2 sail (on the far right) and I don’t know the numbers, only the shape. Cambers and “sheeting angle” are different too – these also are evolving and need considering in another discussion. Also I shifted Arne’s ruler down to an approximate deck position, instead of at the tack.)
Marcus’s question: what is it which actually defines the Amiina Mk2 rig is a very good and profound one, and I would like to have a crack at answering it some time, unless Slieve himself wants to do so, which of course would be much better.
Arne
I would like to challenge your five bullet points regarding the Amiina Mk2 sail:
- · The increased size panels will see more loads in the cloth. Does that matter? Are the loads all that high anyway? Can’t the sail still be made strong enough? What about the load on a Bermudan genoa? Also, would you not agree that there is less loading on a low yard-angle sail?
- · Fewer battens will have to share the same total load. Does that matter? Can’t the battens just be designed sufficiently strong? The difference can’t be much, can it?
- · More vertical tension is needed to keep the luff taut. I think you are actually wrong there. The luff should not be taut (in sense of a Bermudan luff being taut). The luffs are cut straight, not curved for camber, so no need to have them taut. Just enough tension is required to keep the luffs more or less straight, and it isn’t very much. And not only that, with the running parrel downhauls (part of the McGalliard SJR package) that’s about the only tensioning of any kind required to make the sail drape correctly, provided the hoist point is sufficiently high – a major advantage of McGalliard-SJR design in my view.
- · Reefing is done in much bigger steps. Correct. You only have a 4-speed gearbox, instead of 6. It’s a valid criticism, though for me it is only a minor issue. 4 is enough for the sailing I do anyway. I am not a racer.
- · Better lazyjacks or sail catchers are needed to collect the wide panels. No. Lazy jacks won’t do it. For SJR you have got to have a better way of muzzling the jibs. Actually, the sail catcher works so well I don’t know why it isn’t used on all rigs.[Belay that. I don't think a McGalliard sail catcher will work with standing batten parrels. It works fine with Slieve's running batten parel downhauls.] I see it as an asset. In addition, if it is rigged properly, to a large extent it keeps lifts away from the belly of the sail as well as eliminating the need for lazy jacks. Anyway, for the Amiina Mk2 SJR the sail catcher should be considered part of the package.
Oh, and Arne, I forgot to mention - your hybrid Poppy/Amiina/HR is just another example of your wonderful ability to generate new ideas. I am waiting Slieve's reaction with interest. It could be "just what the doctor ordered" for Marcus. I was interested to see that the Amiina Mk2 sail at this scale (estimated 35.4 sq m) is actually greater in area than your higher yard angle hybrid - but you have got away with a lower sling point, so to be fair, if you scaled your sail up so the sling points were equal, you'd have the sail with the largest area in that suite of five SJR sails with identical sling points. The unknown (for me) is how it will drape, will it need a suite of parrels to hold it in place, as well as downhauls - or will it need only the spanned running parrel downhauls which is one of the special features of the Amiina sail. That would be a crucial requirement for me. Otherwise, I'd rather have a Johanna sail, which I think Marcus should also consider.
David
(1) I would be interested if you would expand a little the notion of modifying the Amiina mk 2 sail by adding an extra lower panel. I would be keen to hear Slieve’s comments on that, also, of course. This will not suit me (and I don’t think it will suit Marcus) but it may well be valuable food for thought, for anyone converting a hull which calls for a very tall, high aspect ratio rig.
(Its an idea which I had considered a couple of months ago for an unsplit mizzen sail (an Amiina-shape Van Loan type of sail) to go onto a proposed ketch rig for my scow project – I was mainly looking for ways to increase the area of the mizzen, without adding to the chord. (I’ve got a problem: I now fear that my CLR is too far aft – I’’ll be asking for advice about that at a later time.))

I doubt if I will go ahead with that rig, I am leaning more towards a single mast rig, but David’s comments have sparked my general interest).
(2) Regarding your proposed Poppy sail on SibLim 10m. I think the mast is a bit short. The 21 degree halyard angle may not be enough to get the full benefit of the Poppy sail - and this is exacerbated by the forward rake you have given the mast. I would dearly love to have forward rake. Its an aquired taste - I had previously fallen in love with the aft raking masts of L Francis Herreshoff and other American designers, but after Annie explained the advantage to me of forward rake, on one occasion, I began to change and now my heart leaps when I recognise a junk in the distance by the Chinese rake of its mast. But I wouldn't put rake on a McGalliard SJR, without a VERY good reason. Now you probably know all this, and I should probably leave it to Slieve - but I am going to risk "teaching grandmother to suck eeggs".
One of the exquisite features of Slieve's designs - and the factor which most attracted me, was the absence of any need for horizontal-pulling running or standing parrels, a property which is built into the geometric outline of the sail - you will recall Slieve's description of how he first designed the sail outline with dowel rod and string. Looking at the stark simplicity of Amiina 2, nobody would guess how much might be lost by tinkering with the proportions. There is always talk on the forums about adding this parrel or that parrel and I got so confused about all these parrels that I nearly gave up on junks altogether. There doesn't seem to be a word in the junk vocabulary for it, so I invented one which I have used occasionally - that is, "drape". It means in this context, the ability of a soft fabric to hang the way you want it to, with very little outside interference other than gravity and, in the case of a sail, the aft-seeking horizontal component of the sheeting forces). If the proportions of a high-balance low yard angle sail are just right, and the sling point is high enough (or more precisely, if the mast/halyard angle is low enough) the sail will automatically drape almost without any of the usual suite of parrels which most people seem to need, and the forces needed to make the sail drape correctly are quite small, almost (but not quite) entirely vertical. It then becomes practical to dispense with the usual parrels and use Slieve's spanned running parrel downhauls which to me seem so much more elegant and simple - I realise it still means at least two or three lines to adjust when reefing - nothing really saved there - but all they need is a tweak - and you have to have the downhauls anyway, or otherwise how do you keep the jib luffs straight? So, I think your proposed rig might possibly need the suite of what I call old fashion parrels, including standing batten parrels - because you are going to be fighting gravity with the foward raking mast, plus the pull of the horizontal component of your 21 degree mast/halyard angle, in addition to needing the downhauls to keep the jib luffs straight - perhaps the worst of both worlds, so to speak. It wouldn't surprise me if you have already thought all this through, and have an answer I hadn't thought of. In that case I'll learn something. But to anyone else, I would say: if you want a McGalliard SJR such as a Poppy or Amiina rig, don't make arbitrary small changes - you might end up with something that doesn't work as well as it should. If it was anyone else, I would advise them to raise the masthead a little and straighten that mast - or, if you prefer to use the conventional system of parrels, consider redesigning the sail outline somewhat, so that you have an entirely new sail design, with perhaps just the Poppy "look". I don't know what Slieve is going to say, and I hope I am not "getting above myself" even more than usual - but there's some food for thought anyway.
Edit: another thing, I had forgotten. Edward should be asked to hop in here too - he knows more about the performance of the Mk2 rig than anyone - and can also advise in practical terms, the differences between the Mk1 and the Mk2 - a matter which should be of great interest to all of us. I do hope Edward sees this, and feels like adding his thoughts.