Hi Coldspot,
Master Zubbly will see, he always does.
If he has anything to add, he will, he always does.
That's part of why he is The Master.
I am more visual, and there is a lot of stuff I have not seen.
I'm only comfortable with the box fan. Having some experience in the 'unusual', and seen some pics.
For the box fan motor, I like the 4 magnet / 6 coil 3 phases (probably "Jerry Rigged"). Because the 8 magnet / 6 coil will have pairs of magnets shorted across the top or center part of the laminates, and the cogging is less than 6/6 single phase (in my experiences here). The factory wiring has a BUNCH of wiring configurations that can adjust the output at a given RPM.
John and Zap have had less than good experiences with 4 magnets / 6 coil box fans, I gather. Not sure why, most of mine are thrown together with whatever is at hand.
John has low output and Zap has bad cogging with the 4/6 configurations. Maybe their magnets are to wide? Still trying to figure Zap's problem out, but I'm at a loss.
Statements like "the 1/4 HP motor has two sets of six coils inner and outer are #22"
I don't know for sure what the means.
I figure it is PROBABLY good for 6 magnets (single or groups). And maybe 2 seperate phases or coil groups. The left coil and the right coil are right next to each other?
My experience says it will be high volts but low amps, low cut in speed. Reassigning the coils like garbogen style, then connecting for seperate rectification seems best for me, usually. If I can do it.
The GE 2 speed? Wish I knew.
(I have a feeling the coils could be reassigned for 2 or 3 or 4 seperate 'Jerry Rigged' outputs with different cut in RPMs.
Then with 12 magnets... Stop me! I'm confusing myself!)
If you have the motors, slap the correct number of magnets on, go from there with skewing and air gap and delta or star...
For conversions, I think about the coils and magnets layed out flat, like a cone was forced through the axel until everything lays flat. Then the same principles apply to conversions as they do to axials, like 6/8, 9/12, or 9/27, or 6/18...
BTW, there is a 2/3 (same as 4/6) 3-ph formula windstuffnow Ed, Jerry, and Flux seem to have exploited from time to time. In my opinion it is the same as overlaping coils, maybe with a twist, depending on how it is applied or defined.
I like a 'real old' post by Ed, "3 phase vs 3 phases" or thereabouts.
G-