hi Rod and others:
been a while since i was around and a lot has changed here...

as for testing output, we were going to use something called a "prony brake"
it is basically a means of measuring torque on an output shaft at speed.
i figured to make up a test jig on the front of a pickup and run the shaft back over the cab so the blades would be in the clear air..
then with a driver, a hand tachometer and the prony brake one could determine a torque curve for a set of blades over a range of windspeeds and rpm levels.
with this and some math one could determine the optimum windspeed, rpm and loading for any tested blade set.
armed with this information as an example if a blade set produces 500 watts at 20 mph windspeed at a shaft speed of 500 rpm, one could then design and
build an alternator to more closely fit and operate within those parameters...
i guess i wonder how many good alternator designs are underperforming do to inefficient or undersized blade sets. thus leaving the builder bewildered and disillusioned. for that matter the inverse could be also happening.. with really good blade set profile that is apparently underperforming because of an alternator not properly matched to the application.
i think maybe you understand where i am going with this.
bob g