
If the sail is to be used with strong winds, they would have to pass over the rolled Genoa sheets (+maybe their bowlines), which might prove difficult for -essentially- loops of rope kept taut against the rolled sail; the sheets could be untied and the rolled sail blocked by some rope, my rolled Genoa sheets are at 2-3m above deck level I have to stand on the pulpit to reach them, no way I'd make such acrobatic figures with bad weather.Interesting. I wonder if using parrel beads, akin to a gaff mainsail, instead of a sleeve would make hoisting and dropping less of a faff.
RE: If you had a dyneema luff and dyneema halyard for the sail you would not need to use the furled headsail.
Almost all head sails excluding spinnakers, gennakers and code zero are hanked onto a stay. I don't think I would get enough tension even with dyneema on a free flying jib in heavy weather that is why I am taking this path (for now).
Thank you all for your input.
gary