Coldspot,
Ghurd has alot of experience in modifying these little motors so I would trust what he said about drilling a hole and burying the magnets, especially if you are going to be stacking them. Alot of the flux will just bleed into the surrounding metal.
As you suggest you could chuck it up and rotate it to file off 1/8 inch, but I think grinding 6 flatted areas with a bench grinder would be faster. I think Ghurd's 4 magnet 6 pole approach results in less cogging but does not allow for as much output power as one would get using all the poles, wire and 6 magnets. It is pretty tricky trying to keep the cogging down to an acceptable level (especially if you use neos) that you can get the unit rotating with a small 2.3 to 3 ft prop - which is about the size that works best with these box fan motors.
There are several references to wire guage tables on this site that give the guage, diameter, circular mils, and resistance/1000 ft. You will need this table, and a fairly accurate method (calipers) to measure the wire size if you are going to try to determine the number of turns of the original wire. The method I use is to measure the wire diameter and go to a table to determine what guage it is. Then make a best estimate of the average diameter of the windings on the stator poles. Then measure the resistance of each winding - meaning the total end to end resistance of one of the windings (usually the separate windings are a different color of enamel coating). From these measurements you can calculate the number of turns of each set of windings. Its not 100% accurate as it is difficult to exactly determine the number of feet of each winding because you are estimating the average diameter of the windings (diameter X pi = circumference); but it gets you a rough idea. If you find you have the same number, or very close to the same number of windings in 2 sets of windings then you can parallel those windings to get a lower impedance winding which will result in less IR loss as the current increases on the output. On many of these motors there are so many turns on each pole that you get a fairly low V/RPM factor so you can even cut the wires at the mid point (3 poles included in each set) and wire the 3pole sets in parallel to further reduce the impedance. For these small motors if you can get around 25 to 30 RPM/V by playing around with the windings and a DC resistance in the neighborhood of 5 to 10 ohms (your actual output impedance will be higher than this because there are so many turns wound around the laminates that you get quite a bit of inductance) you can get at least 10 to 15 watts out of them with a 2.5 to 3 ft diameter prop in a 15 mph wind.
Johnlm