This circuit will detect AC line currents of about 250 mA or more without
making any electrical connections to the line. Current is detected by passing
one of the AC lines through an inductive pickup (L1) made with a 1 inch
diameter U-bolt wound with 800 turns of #30 - #35 magnet wire. The pickup
could be made from other iron type rings or transformer cores that allows
enough space to pass one of the AC lines through the center. Only one of the
current carrying lines, either the line or the neutral should be put through
the center of the pickup to avoid the fields cancelling. I tested the circuit
using a 2 wire extension cord which I had separated the twin wires a small
distance with an exacto knife to allow the U-bolt to encircle only one wire.
The magnetic pickup (U-bolt) produces about 4 millivolts peak for a AC line
current of 250 mA, or AC load of around 30 watts. The signal from the pickup
is raised about 200 times at the output of the op-amp pin 1 which is then
peak detected by the capacitor and diode connected to pin 1. The second
op-amp is used as a comparator which detects a voltage rise greater than the
diode drop. The minimum signal needed to cause the comparator stage output
to switch positive is around 800 mV peak which corresponds to about a 30 watt
load on the AC line. The output 1458 op-amp will only swing within a couple
volts of ground so a voltage divider (1K/470) is used to reduce the no-signal
voltage to about 0.7 volts. An additional diode is added in series with the
transistor base to ensure it turns off when the op-amp voltage is 2 volts.
You may get a little bit of relay chatter if the AC load is close to the
switching point so a larger load of 50 watts or more is recommended. The
sensitivity could be increased by adding more turns to the pickup.
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