"Armature reaction brings up an interesting point. Alternators by their nature have high output impeadence. You can't get a decent power transfer if your load has a lower impeadence than your alternator. I don't think the way people are currently winding coils and building alternators is not as deaply thought out and well planned so to speak as they could be for best performance."
Interesting comments. Wind machine alternators need very strange requirements if you want to charge batteries without any form of electronic intervention.
Nearly all the early design was done on iron cored alternators and with the early ferrite magnets they were very reactive. Matching the blades was a compromise that gradually evolved.
"Trouble is take the iron out of the equation, add the rare earth magnets, and axial design and 100 years of conventional easy machine theory/design flies out the window."
You seem to be one of the very few to recognise this. It changes the approach you need to blade matching dramatically. The problem with reactive alternators was to maintain enough load in higher wind speed and blades ran away.
The air gap machines are only resistance limited and load too quickly in high winds and drag the blades to stall and without a mppt converter blade match is a serious compromise but it is predictable.
Although conventional alternator design goes out the window for the air gap machines, they are easier to predict the performance and as long as you forget all you ever learned about machine design and just stick to the basic emf equation they are easier to deal with without reactance to consider. There are tricks that you need to learn about eddies in the conductors once you get away from slots but in general the things are very predictable. The internal resistance doesn't seem to behave as expected when driving rectifiers but the factor seems fairly constant once you get an empirical value.
Unless you use an electronic mppt converter then you must consider the overall power out and not be guided by best alternator design criteria. Blade matching determines output much more than alternator efficiency and you will have to trade alternator efficiency if you want the best power out. The non optimal loading of the alternator is in fact essential to get a good overall compromise if you must clamp the alternator to a rectifier and battery. If you are looking at this from the point of view of a machine designer used to conventional loading the ideas here may seem strange indeed.
The alternator needs to work at constant voltage, variable speed and have an input power related to speed cubed. Without field control this can only be approximated to and the presence or not of reactance changes the compromises you have to make.
Flux