That's my job: be grouchy. Ask anyone here
Visser's video has a lot of interesting stuff in it. Cheers for including the Bergey data and it looks OK.
Their own gets better output than the Bergey but that's no surprise since the XL-1 is a 30-year-old generator design.
The next thing they do makes things a little fuzzy. They plot the Betz limit line, which is fine, except that's a "input" power line. As long as you can keep the inputs and outputs straight, you're all right.
@9 m/s Betz = 1300 W available (or in other words 59.3% of 2.2 kW = 1300 W
We can compare the two turbines - before the duct:
Bergey = 700 W ouput / 1300W input = 54% blades and generator efficiency
Visser, no duct = 920 W / 1300W = 70% blades and generator efficiency
So the basic turbine that Visser's using (in a wind tunnel) does better than Bergey's (in natural wind). So let's say Visser's machine is just as good as a Bergey XL-1.
Visser, Ducted = 1900 W / 1300W = 146% blades and generator efficiency
With the duct on, the output improves dramatically. Visser doesn't say that the blades turn faster, or that the generator may be operated with different electrical load, so assuming the generator or the load are not changed, then the blades must be turning about 20% faster.
It took me a while to figure out what I'm looking at in the video. Watching the turbine run, notice that the fans aren't turned on. The turbine is being driven by some other source. Given the lighting in the building, it seems to be open behind the camera, so there may be a breeze blowing into the building. So what we're watching is probably not a data-collection test, just something caught on camera.
The duct is upwind of the turbine, and the blades trail down-wind of the tower. The open mouth of the duct is 10.5 feet diameter, making the mouth 87 square feet, instead of 50 square feet for an 8-foot rotor swept area. The ratio is 1.74.
Comparing Visser's turbine with and without the duct: 1900/920 = 2.1
That's a better ratio than just comparing the duct vs. swept areas. Well done on that point.
Next I want to see Visser's turbine out "in the wild" and see how it does with a bit of turbulence.