Jamie
i have been looking at your earlier post and I see that you asked the question about magnets 1" x 1/2" thick.
In this post you say they are 1/4" thick. That will explain the high cut in.
There are discrepencies in your data, you say that you got 60v dc at 900 rpm and that would give a cut in of about 200 rpm allowing for diode drop.
That is a fair way from your 250 rpm cut in so I suspect one of your speed measurements is not right.
Half inch air gap is quite wide for 1/4" thick magnets and the 250 rpm cut in may be realistic. I have never used round magnets, but with rectangular ones of the same area I would have expected cut in about 220 rpm.
With the thinner magnets I think we have to lower your expectations somewhat.
250 rpm is a good cut in speed for a 6 ft prop, you could manage perhaps 7 ft but with a tsr between 7 & 8. You may still be able to have a maximum rating of 400W but remember these maximum figures are always based on what the alternator will stand and will only be reached in high winds.
In low winds the larger the prop the larger the output but you have to have the alternator speed suit the size of prop.
You seem to have de-rated your wind speed since an earlier post, so you are not likely to see big power very often.
Starting with a big prop and cutting the blades is an uncertain process, it will make it run a bit faster but not that much. If it is based on Dan's type blades with little twist and taper it works better than using ones based on the blade calculators with lots of twist and wide at the root.
To scale tsr with diameter you need to scale everything together. If you shorten a blade you increase the tip angle and also the chord width, both of which reduce tsr.
I think you may be able to modify the present blades to something nearer what you want. Cut them down to about 3'6" to make the diameter 7 ft. Make them about 3" wide or a bit less at the tip and about 6" at the root, plane the tips to an angle of 3 deg by removing material from the front face leading edge. Try to get an angle of about 6 deg at the centre and a width of 3.4 to 4" and just blend in the bit near the root best you can with the outer part .
See how this works out, it should spin much faster, but remember that the power in low winds is very limited. Don't expect anything below 7 mph. You should get about 100W at about 12 mph.
Flux