High Tech Sails
If your Dacron sails are new, they have their initial designed shapes. As they age the fabric stretches after being subjected to higher wind pressures and these shapes tend to change. I'm sure you've seen deeper belly in the middle of a mainsail or a hooked luff from an over tensioned leech cord when the leech flutter could no longer be controlled. I have a well used Mylar/Dacron scrim tri-radial 135 Genoa and a well used Mylar bi-radial 155 Genoa, and while I'm sure they don't have all their initial shape, the added strength and alignment of the fabric panels probably keeps the ageing to a minimum, as does carefull handling and folding.My 2 year old 'new' mainsail is a cruising weight Dacron withone full head batten and the other three as oversized 'IOR' length battens. It has a loose foot, a cunningham gromet, two reefs and an adjustable leech cord. In other words, it's a Dacron 'racing sail'. I've chosen these combinations with the good advice of an excelent local sailmaker who steered me away from spending more money on higher tech materials, he felt I didn't need.I would further qualify that advice was given for my race rigged deep keel Hunter 28.5 which we sail shorthanded in PHRF as well as 'cruising division' non spinnaker races.However her performance has often been borne out by finishes with corrected times equal or faster than boats in the racing categories above us. We can easily sail to our rating because of the way we've prepared the boat.If it is your intention to compete with the top high-tech racers you will probably want to move up to higher tech sails as the dacron sails age and as you add to the sails you carry. Don't miss the other points of race prep such as a folding or feathering prop, an immaculately prepared & wet-sanded bottom job and all the sail adjustment controls that didn't come standard on the boat.