Have'nt had use of a camera before now, borrowed my sons today so here are a few of what I have been doing.

These are my first set of blades - 10' dia. T.S.R. 7 Made of 3 X 8 fir, mounted on a car strut with bicycle gear mounted to the rotor. I had planned to use a car alternator so reason for gearing. Scrubbed this idea after reading on board for awhile (you might note hurricane damage to my cinder block walls of my house in process of being built).

This is a shot of a nose spinner I made for the blades from dense foam with a gel coat, coating.

This is a shot of my first conversion attempt. I made a big boo-boo thinking it should have been an 8 pole whereas it was only a 4 pole and showed no output with curved ceramic mags. So rewound as a three phase 8 pole 55 winds per coil, but got very poor results. At 850 rpm open DC 24.6 volts. 13.6 volts at 1.5 amps. Ordered neos and got much better results. 850rpm, 14 DC volts at 17 amps.

This is a shot of the daton with my second conversion attempt trying for smaller size but hopefully better output.

This is a shot, don't LOL at my windings. I wound this one three phase, 6 coils per phase, 12 wraps of #14.

This shot shows the rotor 12 poles, using 1/2 X 2 X 1/4 neos on a jet pump armatuer with end plates from jet pump as the original motor only had bushings. My first conversion showed very little cogging, able to turn it easily with thunb and index finger. The armateur is only 1" long and I only used 8 poles. The second conversion, I am having significant cogging problem approximately 2 foot pounds of torque. I wish I had ordered 24 of the 1/2 X 1 X 1/4 neos so I could have offset them. At 850 rpm, star open volts, 20.5 VDC. 16 volts at 17 amps. I realize while doing this posting that I am using a hand drill for these 850rpm test which is loading alot and is probably limiting the output of both of these to the hp of the drill. I am going to pull the mags off of this rotor and try skewing them to see if this helps my cogging. Thanks again for all the help over the course of my projects so far.
Christopher