EDIT4: TLDR
What I would like to ask about is if we should try and strife for square wave or are sine waves ok?
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while I am reading up on magnet to coil ratio's I see a lot of information on the many many variations and that each use case can benefit from a specific set of combinations.
As to the why is probably way above my pay grade so I'll not bother at this stage trying to find out for now.
Other than the mention of asynchronous vs synchronous loads I have gotten here in this thread. That I am still interested to learn about but the resources I find again is way above my head ;( this early in my learning curve.
Anyway. I realise now that I have gotten this nice looking sine wave because the magnet counter pairs are spaced far enough that the field also still crosses to the magnets adjacent to them. EDIT3: After all this is what a dual stator (coil) single rotor (magnet) i.e a coil sandwich depends on. And I know this falls in the exotic category but one of these days I will try and make something useful with it.
The data I have tells me that at a spacing of 20mm there is already a direct path with little to no field crossing over to adjacent magnets. This would result in a more pulse like/square waveform Mary described earlier.
EDIT: (for my specific setup of magnets and configuration) at 30mm there were still fields crossing to adjacent magnets so somewhere in between 30 and 20mm is where the magic happens when not using iron filled coils.
What I would like to ask about is if we should try and strife for that even though we can perfectly reach our target voltage with sine waves (i.e: fields that also cross to adjacent magnets).
I did not specifically test for it yet but will do so next Monday but I am assuming using iron filled coils will also lead to pulse like waveforms.
I am in favour of having the magnet counter parts spaced a bit apart so that the pull between them stay manageable. But if I have to then I am up to the engineering challenges getting them close together will bring

EDIT2: I'd like to add a little anecdote my structural engineer once told me. he said 'you seem to not be inhibited by any knowledge of the field when designing'

i.e because you know nothing you try anything.