Your First Motivation
If it's noisy then no matter how much power it puts out you probably won't be happy. On the other hand, many people ignore the noise of their generators but apparently you're concerns are of a different persuasion.With regard to noise, though, there are two components: one which is made by the blades and the spinning generator, and the other which CAN be made by the support structure as vibrations are transmitted. My first "temporary" solution for mounting a Rutland 910 was really a bailing-wire setup on a pole - just wanted to see how things worked while I thought about how it could mounted in more permanent setup. The mast was attached and braced to the pushpit and the noise vibrated into the aft cabin. After re-rigging the setup, call this "Temporary II", the mast portion was very quiet. The generator itself makes a slightly audible high-pitched noise in winds over, say, 12 kts or so but when down below you can't even hear it. The Rutland 910 is about 1m diameter with six plastic blades.For reference, I don't even like the noise made by a fixed-blade prop when under sail so if that should give you an indication of where I'm coming from re: noise threshold.