Very strange ....
Thanks for the explanation of the sail dimensions Joe and Scott. I am still having some trouble finding out what the actual dimensions were for the OEM jib. The chart that Ted referred me too is different then the other dimensions I have seen. I'm not saying it is wrong because I don't know at this point and I do thank you for sending me the reference Ted. Perhaps I am reading it wrong or one chart is for a fractional rig or something. I have included the chart to indicate where I am confused. One source I found indicates that the OEM sail was luff=20.18' leach=18.18' and foot is 9.1'.
None of the used sails are exactly the same as the OEM and the prices are all over the place. Thanks so much for your help guys.
First things first because I find the data to be confusing. Sailrite indicates that you have a masthead rigged boat with "I" dimension of 24.0' Sailboatdata.com shows a 1972 fractional rigged boat with "I" dimension of 22.0'. There also seems to be a 1972 masthead rigged with a "tall mast". The 1973 model is masthead rigged with the dimensions referenced in Sailrite.
You should first verify which one is correct ... I tend to trust Sailboatdata, but I don't know the particulars for your boat. If you have any question, let us know. You may be finding a wide variety of used sails based on these differences. You will have to weed out the choices that don't apply.
Secondly, study the definitions of the P, E, I, J dimensions. They are your rig dimensions, not the sail dimensions, particularly for the head sail. Sailboatdata indicates that your forestay length is 23.42' for fraction rig, 25.63' for masthead rig. This does relate to the luff of the jib or genoa. But remember that the luff of the sail will necessarily be slightly less to accommodate fittings, furlers, etc.
You will find used sails of various luff lengths that will work (all shorter than your forestay length). If you choose a new sail, the manufacturer should have your dimensions to make the luff according to your requirements.
I would not worry too much about the OEM specs for the original sails. If you buy a new sail, the important thing is to have it made to the specifications that you desire. If they have pre-cut sails and all you are doing is specifying the overlap percentage (like 110%, which is typical for an OEM sail), you should be fine as long as you verify the rig dimensions. I'd hate to see a mistake based on the confusing issues that you are noticing.
Look on-line at Sailboatdata.com for your model of O'Day if you have any question about these issues. Plus, there are plenty of O'Day owners in the O'Day forum that should be able to clarify.