300w seems low for this motor...
If it were spinning at 1750 RPM and charging a 90 or 180V battery bank, 300W would be low.
But the voltage is proportional to the RPM and a good blade set has a tip speed ratio (TSR) of about 6. That means the tip of the blade is going about 6 times the speed of the wind when it's loaded efficiently, and the longer the blade the lower the RPM for a given wind speed. By the time you get your blades long enough that the swept area will give you significant power you're spinning a few hundred RPM, not a couple thousand, in any wind short of a huricaine. You'll be able to drive charge into 12V and maybe 24V batteries with this thing. But to drive 96V batteries you'll have blades so short that your mill would be the size of a lawn ornament and produce as much power in order to get up to where you're charging at all in reasonable winds.
Meanwhile, back at charging a 12V battery: The main limit on how much you can get out of a genny is coil heating (proportional to square of current) and brush current capacity. With a body like this motor you don't get a lot of extra cooling from the wind's airflow. So you have to limit your current to about the rated current.
With lower voltage and unchanged current you get lower wattage. Tough, but that's the physics.
Fortunately, something like 300 watts is enough power to be useful.