OK I see.
I think you may be better off drilling only one side and allowing the air to be sucked around the magnets and windings. Yes a lot of air will be recirculated but some will leave and the air would constantly be cooling the coils. If you have holes drilled near the center and then some up near but just past the coils you would have constant air over the windings and magnet gap where it is hottest, and then some air would be pushed out and new air into the system.
I was looking at the water cooling setups people have done and what is interesting is that they only put some water blocks on the inside of the stator. So all the cooling is from pulling heat from the stator. I wonder how that would be compared to my active cooling with high air flow. A water cooling setup in this way still relies on the heat exchange from the windings to the stator.
My setup if I ever get it running relies on high air flow through the windings and blowing the hot air out of the motor and having fresh air entering. The 30mm EDF is so powerful that the airflow is very strong. I'm thinking it may be more effective then the water cooling method others have used which they claim allows them to run the motor as hard as they want. Like you mentioned, your fan setup doesn't slow down the temp rise, it only allows you to cool it down faster to allow for the next temp rise. My setup hopefully will stop the temp rise. I also don't see the water cooling method from the stator stopping the temp rise also. It takes too long to get that heat from the windings into the stator and into the water block.
I think you may be better off drilling only one side and allowing the air to be sucked around the magnets and windings. Yes a lot of air will be recirculated but some will leave and the air would constantly be cooling the coils. If you have holes drilled near the center and then some up near but just past the coils you would have constant air over the windings and magnet gap where it is hottest, and then some air would be pushed out and new air into the system.
I was looking at the water cooling setups people have done and what is interesting is that they only put some water blocks on the inside of the stator. So all the cooling is from pulling heat from the stator. I wonder how that would be compared to my active cooling with high air flow. A water cooling setup in this way still relies on the heat exchange from the windings to the stator.
My setup if I ever get it running relies on high air flow through the windings and blowing the hot air out of the motor and having fresh air entering. The 30mm EDF is so powerful that the airflow is very strong. I'm thinking it may be more effective then the water cooling method others have used which they claim allows them to run the motor as hard as they want. Like you mentioned, your fan setup doesn't slow down the temp rise, it only allows you to cool it down faster to allow for the next temp rise. My setup hopefully will stop the temp rise. I also don't see the water cooling method from the stator stopping the temp rise also. It takes too long to get that heat from the windings into the stator and into the water block.