I'm renting a place that has 240V radiant floor heat, basically a series circuit of resistive heating element cast into the concrete floor. The control is an adjustable bi-metalic single pole single throw on-off switch. When fully powered, the circuit pulls about 25 amps, as read by my somewhat accurate clamp on ammeter. I would like to add a small light (LED? Neon?) to the thermostat to indicate when the element is drawing current/the heat is "on". Since the power is 240, it's not just a simple matter of connecting one lead of a neon bulb to ground and the other to the switched side of the thermo, since both sides are "hot" and the light will be "on" regardless of the thermo's switch. Since the thing pulls a fair bit of current, would it be possible to build a simple circuit which would sense the current flow, perhaps by a few coils of wire wrapped around one of the high current leads to detect when flow is occurring & light an LED? I don't doubt thermostats exists with this obvious feature, but again I'm renting, plus my $$$ is low at the moment (which is why I'm obsessed with knowing when this cash-hogging heater is running), and I'd like to accomplish this as cheaply as possible. Any suggestions appreciated!
TIA
Dan
TIA
Dan