by Bob Boyce » Sun Sep 24, 2006 2:52 pm
The number of magnets and coils is largely determined by the diameter of the rotor and stator. For efficiency, you want close to the same number of coils vs magnets. Having more than one magnet transecting a coil at once causes efficiency losses.
There is one thing to remember however. Use an odd number of magnets vs coils. If you use 9 coils for example, use 7 or 8 magnets, not 9. When you use the same, or multiples of the same number of magnets vs coils, the rotor will exhibit a very noticed cogging effect under load. This translates into stronger vibrational stresses that may cause premature failure. By using a differing number of magnets, the cogging of each coil is slightly offset from one another, so they do not create an accumilative effect that work together to create rotor impulses. This is a design flaw I see in many plans for homebrew wind generators.
When determining the number of coils, remember to rectify the output of each seperately. The offset magnet approach produces impulses that are out of phase with other coils, so combining multiple coils into a single rectifier is not as efficient. It will also rotate smoother at lower RPM with more numerous smaller diameter coils/magnets than with fewer larger coils/magnets
Bob