Thanks Ed,
I think that also means that the alternator design for any VAWT needs to have a lot more wire and magnets than one for a HAWT. It seems you would need a three phase design, a larger diameter alternator to make room for a larger number of magnets and more coils, each coil should have many turns, and should probably be of the layered variety rather than the side by side coils. In short, anything to have more magnets running past more turns of wire.
If VAWT's have more torque than HAWT's, and the speed stays the same regardless of length, I guess really long (or should that be "tall"?) VAWT's are not needed unless you can make an alternator that can make enough power at that low speed. You might easily have to resort to gearing in order to make use of the power from a particularly tall VAWT.
I'm just thinking that a tall VAWT is probably not much more difficult to build than a short one. Just longer pieces of PVC or whatever. The drawback would be the difficulty of making an alternator that could make use of that extra torque at such a low speed.
If a 2kw HAWT is around 16 feet in diameter, that's about 3.14X8squared = 200 square feet of swept area. Does that mean that a VAWT with the same area, maybe 4 feet diameter (used in the equation as a "width" of the area blocking wind) would need to be about 50 feet "high"? to cover the same area and make the same amount of power? To put that another way, 4 feet diameter and 10 feet long (full length of PVC pipe) would only be around 400 watts? Am I in the ball park? Seems like a pretty big unit for just 400 watts.
Here's a thought...Make about 10 of them, each maybe 4 feet tall or less to make it simple. Take each one to it's own bridge rectifier, and then put those DC outputs in series to get a higher voltage. This way your alternators can be "normal" HAWT type alternators, with a low voltage output (because of the slow speed) from each one, but with a high total. I know that you are all thinking "oh my god, 10 towers?" Nope, I'm planning to go against all reason and plop them right on the ground...with a 10 mph wind racing up the hill right at them.
jp