Hi Joe
I bent the wire into rough shape, filed the two joining areas flat for a larger contact area. Then I slid the CT in place and soldered the loop with a gas blowtorch using ordinary low temperature tin. I placed some damp paper tissue near the CT to absorb heat if it'd travel that far. Having three windings made it easier to get the CT far away from the soldering area than if I'd had only one winding.
Short circuits are avoided by painting the wire with nail polish (some my wife had left over from the early nineties. I later removed the nail polish except for where the turns are close to one another.
/Alex
I bent the wire into rough shape, filed the two joining areas flat for a larger contact area. Then I slid the CT in place and soldered the loop with a gas blowtorch using ordinary low temperature tin. I placed some damp paper tissue near the CT to absorb heat if it'd travel that far. Having three windings made it easier to get the CT far away from the soldering area than if I'd had only one winding.
Short circuits are avoided by painting the wire with nail polish (some my wife had left over from the early nineties. I later removed the nail polish except for where the turns are close to one another.
/Alex
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