Phil, I can't work out what you are trying to do.
There are so many variables that you are creating that I can't see how you hope to sort out an answer.
Finding voltages for different configurations is one thing. Your different configurations will let you use different sizes of wire to fill the space in each case and the resistances will be very different. Resistance has as much bearing on this as voltage.
If you double the number of turns, what will happen depends on many things. If the gap is big enough to just double the number of turns, then the first coil is far from optimum. You would double the voltage and double the resistance. If you compared like with like, your coil with half the turns could have been wound with twice csa an 1/4 resistance.
Single rotor tests will be of little use if the coil is very thick as the flux will not penetrate many of the turns, so conclusions based on a single rotor would give no idea of what it may do as a dual rotor.
The aim should be to find the best compromise between induced volts and resistance.
The requirements are affected a lot by how you intend to load it, so conclusions for stall limited battery charging will be different from heating or battery charging with mppt.
What you will eventually prove if you can sort all the variables is the maximum power you can expect from a given volume of magnet and a given speed. The configuration to do it will depend on the shape of magnet. Thin magnets will need short air gaps and thick ones will need longer gaps. You should find that the best gap is between 1 & 2 magnet thickness.
I think you can learn a lot if you keep the goals in mind, otherwise you are going to have a lot of data with no practical application.
Flux