A rotating electrical machine can not produce DC directly. All rotating machines produce AC and it is converted to DC via either a solid state rectifier or a mechanical commutator. The very nature of a rotating permanent magnetic machine makes direct production of DC impossible as the coils or windings passing both north and south poles of the magnet which is unavoidable. The frequency of the AC is dictated by number of poles and speed. The modern stators must contain the rectifier internally.
When you hold a modern DC stator in your hand the rec/reg must be microscopic. On KTMs around 2010 the stators change from 8 pole to 12 pole like this but the wiring certainly has no rec/reg. Trailtech seem to think they have DC stators ?
http://www.trailtech.net/stators-flywheels/ktm-stator-kits/s-8362-05
Thank you Looza have a look at the page you linked
The bottom left spec section states
70 Watt High Output DC Stator for 13-15 KTM 450 SX-F & XCF
Use OEM regulator/rectifier and flywheel.It seems to make it clear that the bikes has a Rectifier/Regulator that must be used therefore the stator even though they call it a DC stator actually produces AC. Look at the stator and then imagine the magnets in the flywheel passing each pole. Every pole will experience a North pole and south pole of every magnet in the flywheel = AC output.
I think you will find they call them DC stators to avoid confusion when in actual fact it is confusing for anyone that does not understand electrical theory.
One reason for the compactness is that they progressively increase the number of poles as you say 8 poles increased to 12 poles this increases AC frequency by 50% at the same RPM. This in itself will increase output once the higher frequency passes through a full wave rectifier.
Every wiring diagram I look at on the WEB for KTM 450 SX-F EXC KTMs shows a rectifier/regulator