David, I’m not sure what hunch of yours it is that I have confirmed. Conjecture was all I had, as I had already said, I don’t have experience of a single sail of that size. “I would have thought…” was not intended to be an answer, it was intended to express doubt about what I had been thinking, and wondering if I had missed something.
Anyway, you answered my question, and thank you. From your earlier remark I had wrongly inferred that you were suggesting there might have been a potential problem with the sheeting system of a 5-panel sail when the sail becomes large, and this was a puzzle to me because, as you know, the sheeting forces on a high balanced sail are actually quite low. Regarding the coarse steps available for reefing, you are, of course, quite right about that. There is a small conundrum (weak point, if you like) in the split rig concept – if you divide the sail up into more panels to get finer reefing steps, you reduce the aspect ratio of the jibs. Whether this matters or not I don’t know, but also they are small anyway, and more panels means smaller still and there may be a point reached where they are not worth having. The Amiina sail is a balanced package of many considerations, and I think Slieve got it about right.
I have thought quite a lot about this, and in relation to my own project had been wondering about increasing the sail area by adding a lower panel, rather than simply scaling up the standard Amiina Mk2. (Amiina’s sail with an extra panel looks a lot better to my eye than the sail on that catamaran, I have to say - but there you go, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I guess. And also, more by good luck than good managment, I stumbled onto 2-part sheeting on my little Amiina sail, and I'm delighted with that. Control of twist is near perfect and I can't see how that catamaran sail, with its multitude of panels, can be any better than mine in that respect.) Anyway, high aspect ratio is not aways suitable and it won’t suit my current project boat, though it may very well suit others. Marcus too is limited by the height of the mast he wants.
I agree, it is somewhat of an annoyance (though a rather minor one for me) that the Amiina sail only has a four speed gearbox, so to speak, as opposed to the six gears on other junks – but just like the analogy family car, it still does the job pretty well, and as a practical sail it is still miles ahead of the Bermudan in terms of ease of matching sail area with wind strength. As for the slow flapping leech on a long ocean voyage, this objection is completely beyond my imagination, not having made a long ocean voyage with a junk sail, and never having noticed a slowly flapping leech on my boat – except for the jibs which simply won’t behave at all when reefed. This problem, for me, has been resolved by having a proper sail catcher and not relying on lazy jacks, which is pretty much a necessity with SJR and should really be considered as part of the Amiina rig package. But maybe full length sail catchers are unproven too? I am not sure. They sure do muzzle a sail, 99% of the time anyway and the odd occasion when a bit of sail might hang over the edge is easily fixed.
I think your suggestion of observing the development of a rig through small steps rather than one large one is quite a good point, can’t argue with that - although I do feel very grateful to innovators like Slieve (and you too David) who have in the past been prepared to take some very large steps and then share the results, with commendable honesty, from which the rest of us can benefit.
While always bearing in mind that experts often disagree with each other, I (not being one) continue to appreciate the discussion points you raise, and respect the breadth and depth of your experience. I also think you are being a “devil’s advocate” again David – though that is generally a not at all a bad thing.
In line with your “smallish steps” advice, I am very keen to try a Amiina Mk2 sail of about 40 sq m on my current project (which is coming along, by the way) but my work rate is slowing due to age and it will be another year to two before I will be able to hoist a sail (if I don’t reach the finish line before the project does).

Its not what you would call beautiful either, is it? It was never meant to be a yacht, just a boat. I do appreciate a beautiful boat, but in this vessel I am hoping for some other, more homely virtues.
PS Marcus: I think mostly when talking about the Amiina or Amiina Mk 2 sail, we mean a scaled copy or somthing very very close. Variations such as that catamaran sail, and Fly's split foresail, for examples, have superficial similarity but personally I would regard them as different. The Amiina sail is not a protocol, but it is package of carefully harmonised parts, any of which I would not change too much without first discussing with Slieve. Also, until proven otherwise (where have I heard that before?) I would be inclined to regard any SJR as being best utilised as a single sail (ie a sloop) or possibly the main sail only in a ketch or yawl rig (eg Dave Zieger's Wayward). The only schooner with a split sail that I am aware of is Fly and only the fore sail is split on Fly. Personally, if I were rigging a schooner, I think I would rather have contiguous sails for both, but the owner of Fly, who designed her sail plan, is experienced and will be the person to talk to about that. He's on the membership list (and also Fly will be featured in the JRA magazine some time in the not too distant future). I would follow Arne or David if I were rigging a schooner. Or people who have done lots and lots of sailing in them, such as Annie or Allan (Zebedee).
At some point you have to make a choice. You can't listen to all the experts at the same time on every detail (and most of this discussion is mere detail). Choose the rig you like most (they all have their individual strengths), and listen mainly to whoever seems to have had the widest exprience with that type of rig, in the type of sailing you want to do.
PS Marcus, I made an arithmetic mistake with batten length in that earlier sketch, you were closer to correct with your 6m. Slieve has picked it up anyway. I've gone back and corrected that post.