The "amp inhibiting coil" must be a separate coil, outside of the rotor/stator field... beyond that I am not sure exactly how to wind it or what parameters are key.
But you only need the amp inhibiting coil for the second RVIC, and if I ever get a break from my schoolwork I'll be building the first RVIC... and see what I can do with that. It wont require an outside coil or anything fancy beyond the special stator wind which has bifchokes (see a few pages back).
Stan had copper VIC's ... I know his RVIC was copper, and the VIC in the Hydrogen Gas Gun is copper... so we should be able to get a copper vic going, then we can consider the SS wire, of which I have 4000 feet. When I get my wire for the stator i'll ask what kind of voltage it could stand, and see if I'm able to take 1000 volts out of it without arcing through the coating, and I'll have my Stator varnished and baked too.
This shouldn't be electrolysis at all when I get the RVIC, and I wont be pulsing anything or duty'ing anything, however I do have a spare VFD, Variable Frequency Drive, that I *could* use to control the speed of my drive motor, but this would come after the RVIC because I can't imagine it doing me any good now with the Delco Remy alternator setup.
One of the reasons I want to get an oscilloscope soon is so I can familiarize myself with my Delco Remy alternator and it's pulsing waveform, and then the RVIC when I get that going, compare, and see what's going on, and see if I'm getting the voltage and waveform I should be. I don't know much of anything about oscilloscopes now, but when I get one i'll learn how to use it inside and out so I can really understand this alternator. Of course then I want to take this understanding to a solid state VIC coil too.
I should also note that Stan's Electrical Pulse Generator is the [super version of the] Rotary VIC, patent attached, but that will take some real design work to figure out, and I know the solid state VIC would be much easier. You can learn a lot about how the RVIC works from that patent too. (Read carefully, and between the lines...)