I can compare them head to head...
Jeremy, you can be assured the two sails - North's USA loft product vs. CD product - are not the same. The latter is made with North's proprietary Nordac cloth, which I like very much, and is built to the same computer model. There should be no difference in how the two sails make your boat perform, assuming similar dimensions. The key criterion, however, is your plan not to own your boat for more than 2-3 years; given that, defnitely go with CD.Prior to a Caribbean Circle, I purchased a North 110% headsail (from the San Diego loft). It is possible to buy North at a discount (I coupled the out-of-state order to avoid 7% sales tax with North's once-a-year 25% discount, reducing the price by about 1/3...tho' I don't think that will reverse your wife's veto). The sail was built in North Carolina. Prior to an Atlantic Crossing and solely to fit new sails into a tight budget, I purchased a main, mizzen and 135% from CD. These sails were all built in the Far East. When I compare the two headsails, there's no doubt in my mind the North product will last far longer: far more generous webbing and beefier hardware, and some trimming tricks built in, too. OTOH the CD headsail has the same poly luff to aid in reefing and the same cloth, and the price for this larger sail was about 1/2 the North sail (even tho' this was 3-4 years later). The hardware on the main was mickey mouse and I've replaced most of it, but that should concern you.BTW I also found CD to be quite resistent to fixing a sewn-in fault in the main; basically, they simply outwaited me and I had to depart before having it addressed at my local North loft, something they claim is a benefit of their product.I don't think you get more than you pay for with CD sails, but they do represent good value IMO. If you are leaning in CD's direction, I'd solicit some quotes and chat a bit with a few of the other USA-based offshore sail companies (e.g. Rollie Tasker and Lee); that would be comparing Apples with Apples.Jack