Hello Ed,
Thanks again for the help and direction you provide. It's greatly appreciated.
I spent the past few days researching HAWT blade design and tip speed ratio. Found that Hugh Piggott and if I remember correctly the “Dans†like a TSR of around 7. Also remembered seeing quite a bit of discussion about GOE 222, constant chord, no twist no taper blades. TSR for GOE 222 appears to be best in the 5-6 range. Chris Olson used these on most of his machines and strongly favored them... but then Chris had a strong opinion about many things... I miss Chris, Flux and many others, and the lively discussion from years ago, but nothing stays the same. Solar took over on price and the interest in wind power has waned.
So I wanted to relate TSR to wind speed and to alternator cut in speed. On Hugh's first wind turbine recipe book there is this formula for calculating TSR;
~ Rpm = windspeed (in m/s) x tsr x 60 / circumference.
My best guess at blade diameter to match my alternator is 2.4 meters or 8 feet. Using Hugh's formula to determine cut in speed at first useful wind speed of 7 mph (or 3 m/s) I get the following.
~ 3 (m/s) x 7 (tsr) x 60 / 7.539 (2.4 x 3.14 = 7.539) = 167 rpm
To get to 190 rpm... this is where I reach 24 volt cut in with two layers, 24 turns of 15 AWG I need to bump the m/s wind speed to 3.5 or 8 mph. So I may lose ever so slightly in the lowest wind by needing 190 rpm for cut in. And just for comparison in a 10 m/s (22 mph) wind the formula gives me 557 rpm.
I ran the same formula for a GOE 222 blade and used 6 for the TSR. They may be able to run at 5 without stalling but I have no hands on experience to validate this.
~ 3 (m/s) x 6 (tsr) x 60 / 7.539 (2.4 x 3.14 = 7.539) = 143 rpm
~ 10 (m/s) x 6 (tsr) x 60 / 7.539 (2.4 x 3.14 = 7.539) = 477 rpm
My understanding of GOE 222 is that they deliver greater torque and work well with a stiff alternator. With no experience I can't say if my alternator will be stiff or not. Will there be magnetic drag on the core? I don't know. The ferrite magnets don't feel strong enough to produce much drag. Anyone have an opinion on this? Chris?

So now I'm at a spot of what gauge wire to use, how many winds and even if I should be moving forward with a 24 volt or 12 volt alternator.
When using 15 AWG wire, 24 turns (two full layers) I get 25.10 volts including 1.4 volt rectifier drop at 190 rpm. Using the same wire size and turns I get 12.6 volts at 90 rpm. So I'm a little high on rpm at 24 volts and will not cut in until 8 mph, 3.5 m/s winds and quite low rpm for 12 volts.
When using 17 AWG wire, 32 turns (two full layers) I reach 26 volts at 142 rpm which is just right for 8 foot GOE 222 blades and 12.8 volts at 70 rpm. Almost feels like I could use the alternator to run a HAWT at 24 volts or a VAWT at 12 volts.
So with regards to wire gauge, number of turns and tsr I just need to make a decision... $hit or get off the pot is what I hear my father saying.
Now for something that is frustrating me and can't seem to understand. How do I determine amperage from my voltage testing? Do I need to test with a load? Sparweb mentioned doing this. Sparweb? Using a formula from the chart posted earlier I can determine a number but what does it represent? Amperage = volts / ohms, looks simple enough. I have a voltage reading at a certain rpm and I know resistance, ohms for the total length of wire that will be used.
~ Voltage is 25.1 at 190 rpm, resistance is .917 ohms at 288 feet of wire = 27.37 amps which is 687 watts.
Where are my wheels falling off the bus? Using another handy formula in Hugh Piggotts recipe book he says blade power in the wind equals .15 x rotor diameter (squared 2) x windspeed (squared 3). This gives me .15 x 6 (2.4 meter squared 2) x 42.9 (3.5 m/s squared 3) = 39 watts.
If I only have 39 watts available with 2.4 meter blades at 3.5 m/s wind speed but I can get 190 rpm at 3.5 m/s at tsr 7 how is it the calculation above shows 687 watts?
I know a battery clamps alternator voltage down to battery voltage so is 687 watts the practical maximum available at .917 ohms resistance?
Voltage x amps = watts so at cut in with 25.1 volts I should see amps of around 1.5 to equal the 39 watts available to the blades.
Can I measure / plot volts and amps along a rpm range using only volts and resistance I now have?
Many thanks to all. It's now 5:11 am and I've been up for awhile... couldn't sleep from thinking of this.... way too much at times.
CM