Here's a rough idea of the power curves you are working with for a 8-foot rotor.
Lots of assumptions built into this one - it can vary up and down depending on a lot of things.
In the video the blades look like they have both twist and taper. That should mean this is fairly close.
To use the graph, take a constant wind speed. If the generator limits the turbine to turning at a certain RPM in that wind speed, then the power arriving at the rotor is matched with the power taken by the generator.
Cut-in at 100 RPM is much too slow for a 8-foot rotor. I didn't extend the curves down below 10 mph but it looks more like 200 RPM. This also suits my experience with my 8-foot WT, which does not suffer as much altitude effect and I still believe is stalled, yet cuts in at 160 RPM. You really need to be cutting in at 150-200 RPM to get any useful power.
Shaft power is not electrical power. The generator wastes some energy as heat. This is calculated as (R*I^2). The loss to resistance isn't bad at low power, but it gets worse at higher power. I can only guess at the resistance of your stator wiring, and note that there's an added resistance in the buried 80' wire to the tower (perfectly normal). Let's say for the sake of argument that it's 5 ohms. If you get 10 Amps to flow then (R*I^2) = 500 Watts lost to heat, while the output power will be about (10A * 100V) = 1000 Watts. To drive the generator, you need 1000+500 = 1500 Watts of mechanical power at the rotor shaft. That can only happen at... consulting the graph... 25 mph wind.
YMMV.
It will help to measure the resistance per phase of the alternator. If for some reason the rectifiers are at the top of the tower, and all you get is DC at the terminals you can access, then let us know and we can suggest a different way to measure system resistance.
It will also help to tell any details about the blades that you can. I made some assumptions to get the graph above. It's a bit "perfect" if you know what I mean. Any number of realistic factors could reduce the available power at the rotor to drive the generator.