The reason for the odd number in the most efficient machines is IMO to reduce cogging to almost nothing.
I look inside my hub, pull it apart and clunk its sticks to the magnet rim yet it almost has a freewheel restance to roll. In any symetrical slot pole configuration one magnet is over a slot and to move to the next slot there is cogging.
My HBS is 51 slots and 46 poles again totally odd number. The phase angle is set to fire over the slot at 120 degrees or 120/360ths along the pole.
Much needs to be learned here. The radius of both the stator and magnet rim, length of magnet, hall placement and magnet to pole count needs to work.
63 slots can also use 42 poles with a ABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABCABC winding config.
63 slots can also use 38 poles with a ABCbcabcBCABCAcabcaCABCAcabcaCABCABabcabABCABabcabABCABCbcabcBC winding config
63 slots can also use 30 poles AbaBAbaBcbCBcbCacACacAbaBAbaBcbCBcbCacACacAbaBAbaBcbCBcbCacACac
63 slots can use 28 poles AbaBcbCacAbaBcbCacAbaBcbCacAbaBcbCacAbaBcbCacAbaBcbCacAbaBcbCac
And by this point this can go all the way down by 2 poles to 2 poles only and the winding configs change .
63 slots by 2 poles. AAAAAAAAAAAbbbbbbbbbbCCCCCCCCCCCaaaaaaaaaaBBBBBBBBBBBcccccccccc WHAT THE
Why?
If you cant tell me I would apreciate it. I am converging a lot of information over the past two years I just need to climatise to the whole thing,,
I found a site called powercroco and it has a calculator and much information written up by a Dr. Ralph Okon.
Google powercroco and hit the google translate link. There is much more very awesome resources there than just this cool calculator.
Learn lots and enjoy.