OK, I just said that to get your attention. I've been thinking about this for a while and I can't seem to shake it. Everybody says that mainsails have twist because the apparent wind angle varies, and that's because the true wind velocity increases the higher you are above the water surface. I'm not disputing that concept, but here's something I noticed and can't explain.Because the mainsail is triangular, its chord length varies. from boom length at the bottom to zero (or the width of the headboard) at the top. The sailcloth has the same weight from bottom to top, and the luff tension is about constant from bottom to top. Therefore it stands to reason that the luff of the sail at the boltrope has the same angle to the wind from top to bottom, i.e. there really isn't any twist.Could what we see as "twist" actually be an artificial change in the angle of attack of the chord because its length gets shorter from leech to luff as you go up the sail? To illustrate my point, draw a horizontal section through the sail at the boom (full length of foot). Add the chord of the boom. Now, starting at its aft end, move forward along the curve of the sail (which would be the two-dimensional equivalent of moving up the sail along the leech). When you get about 20% of the way forward along the curve, mark a point. This is about where the aft end of the bottom batten would be if you were looking straight down on the sail from above. Draw a line from there to the luff...the angle of attack of that chord is further aft. Repeat the process at 40%, 60% and 80% of the length of the sail curve (simulating the aft end of each batten). Look at each of those chords...looks like twist, doesn't it. Now look at the luff of the sail. The tangent of the luff entry angle to the wind hasn't changed. So do we really have twist or not?I tried to solve it by assuming a rectangular mainsail (we have triangular mains because we need to clear the backstay and keep the CE low and forward). Gaff-rigged mains are misleading because the aft end of the gaff tilts up and makes it hard to see sail chords. Just so you know I'm not goin' off the deep end, I can look up my mainsail and see the same thing I just described (actually that's what gave me the idea). Any thoughts?PeterH23 "Raven"