So that 3 phase meter, is not going to help you much. It will tell you voltage, but not watts as you need a proper load for the wind generator to send some power to, and you don't have one. It's like figuring how how much horsepower your car engine makes by sitting in the driveway revving the engine.
Also, it's designed to measure AC at 50-60 hertz, and the hertz on that wind generator is going to vary all over the place as the wind speed changes, and may never be near 50-60 hertz. So that meter may not be accurate at all. Or it might be. Never know with this stuff.
I know of no good wind generator like this. Not even the quality brands ones. They all died on me in high winds, and produced nothing worth it in low winds. Solar panels have no moving parts and last 25 years +, so I went that way.
6 months ago, a neighbor put up a small generator to charge his RV battery. On windy days, I could hear it from my place a half mile away, when I was indoors. But on the last wind storm, I didn't hear it, so I think it died. Or someone got tired of the racket it made and shot it.
The good part about it flinging off a blade, as they tend to do it in high storm winds. You generally are not outside then. However, it's still a game of lawn darts with anything in the area.
Chris above posted a great screen shot on how a 3 phase bridge rectifier works. You can built that with a few parts, and connect it to a 12V car battery and measure DC amps (assuming that meter does DC amps), while spinning it with a drill. That will give you a good idea on what it can make.
Also, it's designed to measure AC at 50-60 hertz, and the hertz on that wind generator is going to vary all over the place as the wind speed changes, and may never be near 50-60 hertz. So that meter may not be accurate at all. Or it might be. Never know with this stuff.
I know of no good wind generator like this. Not even the quality brands ones. They all died on me in high winds, and produced nothing worth it in low winds. Solar panels have no moving parts and last 25 years +, so I went that way.
6 months ago, a neighbor put up a small generator to charge his RV battery. On windy days, I could hear it from my place a half mile away, when I was indoors. But on the last wind storm, I didn't hear it, so I think it died. Or someone got tired of the racket it made and shot it.
The good part about it flinging off a blade, as they tend to do it in high storm winds. You generally are not outside then. However, it's still a game of lawn darts with anything in the area.
Chris above posted a great screen shot on how a 3 phase bridge rectifier works. You can built that with a few parts, and connect it to a 12V car battery and measure DC amps (assuming that meter does DC amps), while spinning it with a drill. That will give you a good idea on what it can make.