ThunderCharger3302 said:
Yes, this is what I am looking to do...
Well then ! I suggest you disassemble and study some alternators. Figure out where the magnetic flux flows.
Here's a lawnmower stator, basically not dissimilar to
@XZ923's motorcycle alternator . Please excuse my spelling.
Obviously you can leave out a coil here and there and still make current.
What happens to magnetic flux when you make the magnets smaller and squeeze in a few more ?
All math aside,
I think any individual coil will never be completely covered by its magnet .
There will
always be part of a N and part pf a S pole over the coil.
So magnetic flux never has to pass down through the center of the coil to get from a N to a S , it can just traverse the stator pole shoe instead.
And that magnetic 'shortcut' means you'll lose a lot of the magnetic flux that should have gone through the coil and voltage will suffer.
I still urge you to try it. Truth is I have never looked at a Lundell(claw) alternator with that thought in mind, so i could be wrong.
When magnet pole and winding have same width it's called "Full Pitch"
When magnet pole is wider than winding it's called "Fractional Pitch"
and I've never heard of pitch greater than unity.
These guys explain it.
http://www.davidsonsales.com/docs_pdf/CoilPitch.pdf
Lundell alternatore is inside-out compared to that lawnmower coil i pictured, magnets in middle and stator outside. Magnetic flux still flows through middle of stator coils, though.
Compare size of rotor claws and gaps to size of stator windings. A winding will be several stator slots wide.
Then you're working from observation not imagination and that's better science.
You might get real lucky and find an alternator built with fractional pitch that could accommodate a few more magnets and not exceed unity pitch.
I'll be looking into pitch on next alternator i have apart. I've learned something new from this thread and that makes my day.
old jim