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evlPanda said..
So with the leech all twisty and venting off excess power, up top, and also accounting for apparent wind up top...
What happens if we let the sail twist off alllllll the way down, say, even past the boom? (if I remember correct NP had a sail that sorta does this already)
Could you develop a sail with massive wind range? Would it be too soft and cushy? Could you get away with ...one sail?
Just stoking the camp fire there.
Boats can already do this; checke the amount of twist here;

Check the right hand boat here;

I think there are several problems for windsurfers;
1- If the mast keeps bending, the head of the sail moves backwards. This loads up the back hand, which windsurfers hate;
2 - when the sail twists enough, the head backwinds and therefore pushes the leading edge of the sail to windward, at a time when there is already lots of load on the back hand. Anyone who sailed original Windsurfers with the super bendy original blue mast can remember getting slammed in to windward by the rig inverting, even when you actually pushed away with the front hand;
3- In boats we can easily tune the twist for the conditions moment-by-moment, because we have vangs, travellers, mast rams, etc that we can use to adjust the mast bend, the downward force compared to the lateral force, etc. In boards where we don't have these things, the chance of getting the rig to twist off precisely when a particular sailor wants it to are pretty remote.
Also, the difference between the wind angle at the top of the rig and the angle down low can change because of other factors, such as wind shear which is affected by swell size, whether it's a cool wind blowing over hot ground or vice versa, whether you're sailing inland or on the coast, etc. You can really notice this in boats where you have such excellent twist control and regularly set the boat with more twist on one tack than on the other, or set it up with more twist on a lake than on the ocean.