I'm the American distributor for Kestrel Windturbines from South Africa. So what, you may ask?
Kestrels all have multi-pole, axial flux, poly-phase alternators; that includes the 600,800, 1000 and 2500 Watt models, plus a hydro set we're working on. The 800 and up all have variable-pitch rotors for speed control and all have hollow fiberglass blades; the 2500 has an internal reenforcing "beam" (also hollow FG) built-in as a stiffener.
All of the Kestrels use totally non-conductive materials for their rotor discs (twin for the 2500) since aluminum is an excellent conductor, not suitable for use in an axial-flux alternator. This makes building the appropriate rotors somewhat tricky to fabricate considering the required close tolerances and high strength.
Building a foam/FG blade set might also be a little trickier than one might think, since all WT blades are subjected to endless fluctuations along their length, which will tend to (eventually) separate the skin from the core.
Forget the idea of using aluminum foil as an internal skin, unless you and all your neighbors can live with a huge amount of EMF and/or RF noise in your TVs and radios. Ugh!
Someone mentioned a triple disc; does that mean two stators as well? (How else could you do it!) What is your rated output on this machine?