Very good ! And THANKS!
Your broken solder joint might be what wrecked the CT windings.
I think your gizmo is probably close to working.
We need to get confidence in the CT then the meter.
Have you a Variac ? if not that's okay.
One experiment would be place your DMM on ten amp scale and connect your ten turn CT secondary directly to it, then measure running current of shopvac. That should give of course 1/10th shopvac current,
That'll confirm CT works at very low output voltage, for your DMM is probably only ~ 0.2 volt drop on amps scale.
Then loop your shopvac cord through twice, current should double.
Then loop it again... if triples we probably have an operable CT operating as CURRENT transformer, that is it's operating at low flux.
Reason flux is low is the secondary amp-turns cancel the primary ones. Ideally they'd cancel perfectly but we know there has to be a couple left over to make that little bit of flux flow round the donut.......... ...
Now let's figure out how to test the core itself.
Can you rig an ordinary lamp with a split core so we can excite that core with lower current?
A 60 watt light bulb should be around 0.5amp and we can measure that with DMM.
One turn through core would be 0.5 amp turn
two turns would be 1.0 and so on.
Just a few amp turns i'd think would not saturate the core.
So we could measure open circuit volts on yur secondary and plot open - circuit votage versus amp-turns on graph paper,,
and see if it looks like the magnetization curve - straight line until we approach saturation where it levels off.
In industry we test CT's by forcing them into saturation with a Variac adjustable transformer applying AC to secondary, measure current and raise voltage until it forces saturation and current shoots up.
If it accepts current at too low voltage it has shorted turns or has lost inductance perhaps through an air gap in core. A big CT might take 200 volts to saturate, real small ones just a few volts. The sharp current increase at saturation is the key.
That test also removes any permanent magnetization. ......
Now, keep this though in back of your mind... " the open circuit voltage your CT makes is a direct measure of the flux in the core
so long as flux doesn't depart from a sinewave. . "
.........
Any guess about how many volts the CT secondary would output with the secondary wires disconnected from the unit, with a 10 amp primary current? I had thought that would be fairly high with no secondary load there, which is supposedly why they have those shorting blocks in them to prevent the no load scenario.
Quick answer: I think ~377 volts per square meter of core material for each turn so long as it doesn't saturate !.
Can you measure cross section of core?
Your measured 1 volt ac infers 1/377 square meter at 10,000 gauss, or 1/565 at 15,000.
1/565 m^2 would be ~4 cm square cross section which seems too big.
Something else is going on - is your meter a true RMS? It could be reporting effects of saturation.
......... ......
You are quite right that's exactly what the shorting block is for.
But there's a twist to that thought, and it's the key to understanding CT's. I can remember when they were a mystery to me - they're not intuitive..
Please indulge another of my simplified thought experiments, this is how i think and figure things out.
Ten amp-turns might well be enough to drive your core into saturation on the current peaks. Let's walk through one sinewave cycle starting at zero.
At zero current there's zero flux .
As current increases toward positive peak, flux follows current up until the core can hold no more of it. That's saturation.
When that happens, flux stops increasing and stays "flat" for some time.
The core might even get some permanent magnetization if the current peak is high enough.
Next,
When current passes peak and starts decreasing, flux stays flat until amp-turns let flux start decreasing, and as current heads toward negative peak flux gets pushed toward negative saturation.
After the negative peak, current starts positive again and this repetitive cycle continues.
Now here's what causes the trouble.
Instead of a nice smooth sinewave flux, we have a more flat-topped square-ish looking flux wave that
snaps back and forth between positive and negative saturation. That snap is very quick compared to a sinewave cycle.
That snap-action is what kills insulation.
Recall that voltage is rate of change of flux, e = n
turns X d\Phi /dt, and the edges of our square-ish flux wave have very high rates of change.
So induced voltage waveform is no longer a nice smooth sine wave but a series of very high, narrow sharp "needles" .
Since the needles are narrow they don't have much average or RMS value and a voltmeter doesn't even notice them, but they'll poke right through insulation just like the needles they are.
I have more but this is plenty for one session.
To Do:
1. You mentioned "looseness" in the core. Try to get rid of that, a CT core cannot tolerate air-gap it needs high permeability. (Well there's special CT's that can handle DC component in their current but i do not know how they work.)
So find out what's up with that. Perhaps you can lace the core with some sort of twine to tighten it up and get rid of air gaps. If that's a tape wound core it'll need to be tight. i use braided tournament grade fishing line myself. Epoxy invites creativity...The "burnt spot" you spotted on core could be acting like a shorted turn. maybe you can get some varnish or epoxy in there. 2, Try that open circuit voltage versus amp-turns plot.
If it won't saturate there's something wrong with it, iMHO.
A soldering gun might be a useful de-gausser, hold it near then draw away while holding trigger.
I'm back to what i mentioned last night trying to figure out the dual secondaries in parallel.