Yet another power house!
Started with a 24VDC 350ma ball bearing fan.
Removed the sticker, exposing the plastic retaining ring. Removed it.
Pulled off the blades. A small bearing on the back was loose.
Two screws removed the circuit board and motor.
This motor has 3 connections to the 4 series coils. 1 on each end, and one in the middle.
Cut the traces to the coil leads. Removed a pair of diodes that were connected to one of the outputs. Moved the input wires to the far ends of the coils.
Reassembled.
It makes 6VAC easy finger spinning at about 180 RPM(?).
Short circuit is about 65ma DC after the rectifiers. Shorted doesn't feel any different due to the cogging.
The coil resistance is 55~60 ohms.

The diodes on perfboard is my testing unit. 10 diodes, 7 clips, 100% worth the effort.
Bad things.
The laminations had 4 legs, 1 under each coil. 2 legs were broken before I started.
The crappy magnet ring has no flux path on the back side. It is all plastic, though there is an area that could be filled with steel wire, not sure how much it would help.
Things I should not have done (AKA: fungus' favorite part).
I quickly unsoldered (not the same as desoldered) the 4 legs, leaving stray solder on the legs and board. It took a lot of heat to get them back in. The solderable legs were plastic covered, meaning they melted before it was finished, leaving no way to get everything lined up perfectly. Broken legs didn't help matters.
There was no reason to take the motor off the board anyway.
Super Glue did not stick were I thought it would, but it did stick to everything else.
Meaning the magnet ring seriously rubs the laminations.
And it is not a solid unit.
Anyway, I think this would have worked better than most small steppers for 12V charging.
The far lower frequency would be better, by my understanding. This shouldn't be as limited by inductive reactance of most small steppers.
Might have made 200ma at 12V.
Why did I try it?
Wife needs remote power for the cell phone and GPS for some bike trip. Thought about the fan PMA to the back wheel when the bike was up side down, hand crank the pedals a few minutes at night. Connecting something permanent is out of the question. Probably end up going solar.
I want an LED desk lamp powered by wind.
And it is cheap entertainment. Cost me a nickle, best guess.
G-