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Paired motors with one driving the other:
Series: each coil must see the same current direction and the coils have the same relative phase
Parallel: each coil will see the opposite current, but because both coils are reversed, the relative phase and direction of motion is the same
Single motor rewiring:
Flipping one coil: the flipped coil has opposite polarity so it reverses the coils' relative phase
Flipping a plug: each coil sees the opposite direction current AND the relative phase flips, so three reversals makes one net reversal
What I'm not sure about is how the freewheeling diodes in the de-energized driver will affect the generator action induced current. When you run one stepper, it has to have enough speed to generate enough back-emf voltage to push current through the H-bridge body diodes before current will flow. When you have the two motors in parallel, small loop currents will flow at lower speeds, perhaps?
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Only significant difference I can think of is that the parallel motor being driven will be two full steps out of phase from its normal energized position.
I need to do some more thinking about back-emf phase and load angles. The driven motor is also producing back-emf that opposes the driving motor. But one of the motors should be braking (negative load angle) and the other should be driving (positive load angle) and that phase difference is what allows there to be a net driving force.