Jackie, are you confused yet?
Most of the posts have given reasonable though different descriptions of the situation, so let me try.You get much more power with laminar flow as you already know, and you almost never sail directly downwind unless you can do hull speed (it would be blowing like stink), or its required for navigation. I think you know all that. But you are correct in saying that when the AWA goes aft,you cannot get your boom out far enough to keep all the telltales flying outboard, horizontal, and tight to the sail, as you would on a reach,--- and no one else can either. To do that your boom would have to swing forward of the beam and no standard boat with shrouds can do that. Even on a Nonsuch with a free standing mast gets some turbulence from the size of the mast interference and their backside telltales will disrupted. The only way you could keep all your telltales streaming correctly would be is if you had a free standing, pivoting, mast.So although Franklin and others gave reasonable explanations as to why you try to have the flow always moving across the sail, his statement "Yes, you can have attached airflow on all points of sail" isn't totally correct. When you are in that area between broad reaching and running, or just running with your maximum advantage to leeward, (as determined by the polar speed curve for your boat) you will have your main out as far as it will go, and you will have air flow across the main; but it won't be perfectly laminar and your telltales will not all be flowing. That is also the case for any boat, and In no way is anyone here, saying that your main should be perpendicular to the wind. Thats the stalling trim that should be avoided. Most boats with standard rigging (Where they can let the boom out almost 90 degrees to the centerline) let there booms out all the way when the wind gets to about 115 AWA and just leave it there, vanged as tight as possible. If your boat has no backstay or angled back uppers you can't get your boom as far, so to make your most advantaged course and consequently speed to leeward (as determined by a polar diagram for your boat in that particular wind speed) you probably can't steer quite as far off the wind as the next boat. With the combination of sails you have there isn't much you can do about it. If you had a spinnaker however, that was much more effective going down wind, you could sacrifice some mainsail drive for increased power in the spinnaker and sail with less attention to the main except for its affect on the spinnaker.I hope I didn't add to any confusion.Joe