Sorry, Peter, in my last comment I was a bit rushed.
Last year I was trying to correlate various voltage results, from spinning the
rotors over one coil, against the predictions from FEMM. The chart above was
made from test results from my 16-pole rotor.
I also used a feature of FEMM that plots the flux across a line on the screen
- see below:

In my first models I only measured from magnet to magnet, then across two magnets.
Later I realized that what I really wanted was a line of integration equal to the
diameter of the coil, so if the average coil diameter is 2" in diameter, then draw
a line centered on a magnet pole 2" long.
The diagram below shows the integral across 2 poles, and it reveals a troublesome
reversal of our fortunes:

So it's not obvious when you look at the field lines in the diagram above, but
it's there, and you can find it if you play with the resolution of the FEMM Solution.
If you look at the scale legend, in the upper right of the colour solution,
I was tweaking the scale solely to make it fit whole numbers. When
you change the parameters a little you can find the field lines that don't get
to the other rotor.
Tonight, I've stacked the various windows together as best I can into the same
screen-shot. I find that there are still a few lines short-circuited between the
magnet and the rotor it's on, and the chart shows extra peaks, though it looks empty
of field lines.

When compared to the theory, I kept reading much higher open-circuit voltages
than the model predicted. I suppose I shouldn't complain, usually theory over-
estimates performance, and reality is a let-down - not the other way around!
I never figured out if it was a problem with the model, with my analysis, or
the voltage readings. If you have more success, please share it because I,
for one, will be very happy to see it.
Thanks