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There is hardley anything I can add to what Hud3 wrote above.
For our 40 ft, 13 ton boat our asymmetrical sail is a delight. Our experience is pretty m,ush the same, once the wind gets to 20 knots true (12 to 14 apparent) it's time to take it down. By that time, a poled out jib is all you need anyway.
We use a snuffer that we built from a kit from Sailrite, and it works like a charm. We also do not use the ATN Tacker, but something made from webbing and sailcloth that does exactly the same thing for a much lower price.
Getting the setup right and making sure we have everything led on the correct side of everything else took a bit of practice, but it goes up and comes down easily.
One trick of our set up is that we use one continuous length of line for both sheets. A short tail is permenently attached to the sails clew, and as we ready the sail for raising, it is bent to the center of the sheet with (approprietly enough) a double sheet bend.
In light winds (2 to 7 knots) you can sail surprisingly close to the wind if you are picky about your sail trim, especially keeping your luff tight. As close as 50 deg apparent. That pointing angle pretty rapidly goes up as the wind pipes up and the sail stretches.
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