---I hope to someday produce AC current and just it as is with no rectifiers , inverters and the such .---
The only way I know to do this is to go to Home Depot and buy a 2kw generator and wire it to the house
---If I can ever accomplish this I know I'll need a regulating system---
I've never heard of an AC regulating system. The only way you are going to be able to regulate the voltage from an AC Genny is to control the speed to a very specific unchanging RPM, it will be a mechanical speed regulator, not electrical
---I found one recently with three General electric transformers and a Square D Load interrupter switch .---
If what you are planning could possibly work, you would not need transformers. You would simply build the generator to produce 120vac, and you would need to lock the RPM to produce the 60 cycle per second AC
---I hope someone looking at this will know if these are the type of transformers needed to use / store AC current---
Transformers do not store Voltage AC or DC. They just change AC voltage from one value to another. It is impossible to store AC current. First you need to rectify the AC voltage and store it in a battery, then you can invert it to AC voltage when you need it.
AC voltages have a Frequency. In the USA it is 60hz. The genny that you Want to build would need to make your 120vac while it is spinning at a locked unchanging RPM that gives you 60hz. If the genny spins faster the voltage and frequency will go Up. If it spins slower the frequency and voltage will go down. Eather way it's not usable. and what about when the wind is not blowing, or it's blowing too slow to get the frequency or voltage up high enough to use. you would have to disconnect your loads untill the wind speed increased.
Speaking of Loads, If you accidentally had the genny spinning at the specific RPM to produce the proper power, as soon as you add a load to the genny it will slow down, you can't use that.
Since you don't know what a transformer is I think you should abandon your impossible idea until you can learn enough to know what is possible