The one time I had that happen with a 4 meter turbine, it busted the mast on the tower and I just about lost the turbine off it.Well thats kind of scarry

What did you do about it, what happend after that gust had passed and wind speed decreased again and what would have happend if you weren't home to observe what happend to that turbine and do whatever you did....? This kind of practical experience is like a treasure to me :-)
Anyway, I am not yet convinced ;-)
For my next turbine I will use the same profile that you have already used on some of your turbines, the GOE222
For various reasons, I am a fan of untwisted blades with a constant pitch and chord length and I am about to order a couple hundret meters of aluminium profile from china that I have designed as I didn't like the ones available...That one will have a cordlength of 190mm and be a good fit for turbines of 3-6 m diameter, depending on blade configuration...
As stated in your example, I plan to have them run at about TSR 6-6.5.
It is really also interesesting to do simulations on those blades to see what happens on exrtemely high raynolds numbers.At 30 m/s, the blade tips would spin with something like nearly 200 m/s which is about 700 km/h or 400 mph... from your experience with aircrafts, please tell me if you feel that is possible... ;-) - I don't think so! I guess that maximum possible RPM is somewhere around 600 RPM for a 4 m turbine....still spooky though....!
Did you have the chance to measure RPM during that incident? - That would be really interesting to me!!! Anyway, these numbers can be roughly calculated but it would be nice comparing them to practical results...
The characteristic of this type of blades is that they basically limit themselves to a maximum RPM and power output caused by the great width of the profile on the tip ends...so even if the turbine spins up with no load, there is an RPM limit using those blades and all yoi have to to is to make them strong enough to withstnad this maximum rpm :-) Thanx mister Raynolds ;-)
So those blades at some point will start to stall by themselve which is a nice contribution to safety.
Which, BTW, was caused by a blown breaker.This is exactly what I was refering to in the verry beginning of this discussion. Some stupid electric component decides to stop working and leaves the alternator and blades without load and after a few seconds the whole thing willstart to seek for the wind and furling will be likely to fail.
A disfunction like that is exactly what I think that kind of intelligent braking system like the one I am planning can help with. Within a fraction of a second, the controller would have known about the "no load situation" and kickes in the brake before the prop gets the chance to spin up. So it then basically behaves like a 20 KW dump load for something like half a minute.
Do you think that would have helped you in that situation you were talking about to keep the prop under control?