Arne,
Happy constitution day, and all the best to the norwegian people!
Excellent points of yours! I also find the groove of optimum angle of the junk sail to the wind quite narrow: I'm mostly either pinching or sailing too low. I think it doesn't help to have webbing sewed in at the luff - I expect boltrope would widen that groove. Anyways, the sail is now as it is, but I'll take it as a learning for the next sails.
You remember that tufting experiment on Ilvy last summer? Those telltales, spread all over the sail, definitely helped a lot - though I could only see the lee side telltales of the sun was on the right side. Sewing in some telltale windows would help here, but then we are talking about some fancy-schmancy regatta stuff :-D
I fully agree about the importance to give enough time to accelerate after a tack!
Today we had pretty much exactly the same conditions in the Kiel fjord at the regatta on wednesday: NNE F4-5.
I headed out for some training, trying to stay in the groove while sailing upwind. Turns out, Ilvy's tack angles/ angles to windward werr still not too good. What did I do wrong? How did I manage to get to almost 90° in Sweden last summer?
Then I got distracted from shooting some videos of the tacking manoevre of a junk rig. I did a lot of tacks, but focussed on filming. After that session, routinely checked my GPS track: Wow! Now this is what I had expected while racing: almost 90° in every tack. Was it possible, that I sail better angles if I didn't focus too much on steering!?
What an unexpected result...
Cheers, Paul
(Find the according screenshots attached)