i suppose if the coils are going to be in air anyways it doesn't matter if you have an iron core, or if you replace it with another set of magnets.
I tend to believe that radial flux machines are intrinsically more efficient because the entire coil is at a given radius, producing torque, and the coils are square, not pie shaped which is the worst shape for the perimeter to area ratio. also because magnets are generally only available in square and rectangles, its hard to build an efficient axial machine unless the pole count is high enough that the square or rectangle magnet is not too far removed from its ideal trapezoid shape.
So if you do go the 6x2x1 ferrite magnet route, then perhaps an inner and an outer drum of magnets is the way to go. the coils then are stretched and compressed into a frame of some sort and then bonded together. The drum only need be 1/4" thick.
It is worth investigating if the 6x2x1" magnets should be spaced apart 3/8" of an inch, and a standard 7/8x3/8x1.875" magnets be slipped into the gap as a halbach array. The purpose of this isn't to make the magnetic field stronger but to space the poles apart slightly so the flux density in the air gap is better proportioned, and you might as well fill the gap anyways.
for the coils, an overlapping 3 phase coil should net at least 50% more copper into the air gap than the standard coils most people here are using.
the only problem being the end turns are thicker than the coils, which means that if you manufacture the coils such that they can slip over the inner drum of magnets.. the outer drum of magnets has to be split so that it can be opened up to get it over the coils.
basically the coil cross section is going to look like a dogbone.