Gordon said:
Thank you Genome and John Fields for your replies, I guess I should have
given more information. Hope this is not too long and I don't show my
ignorance too much.
...
Rectified/filtered output came out at 71V and 11mA with a 6K resistive load
and 47V and 30mA with a 1.5K load.
I can easily reduce the turns to lower the voltage but what current should I
aim for so that this 'thing' will live happily ever after ? The transformer
will be in a ventilated plastic box under the house. Ambient sometimes gets
to 35 °C.
...
C'mon, guys, the detailed theory may be a bit involved, but the practice
of CT's is pretty simple!
If you have the secondary evenly wound with N turns of low-resistance
wire, and short it, the current through the secondary opposes the
current through the primary to exclude all flux from the core. So the
secondary current is 1/N the primary current, to a very good
approximation.
The farther you get from a perfect sheet of secondary current,
zero-resistance wire, and a perfect short circuit, the more flux gets
into the core, and generally the less accurate the current ratio. But
the approximation is still very good up to core saturation, insulation
breakdown, and secondary power dissipation limitation.
The only thing about the OP's CT that really concerns me is the very
thin, 0.125mm wire. Otherwise, he could just short a couple of LED's
back-to-back in series with another pair of back-to-back LED's and put
the resulting voltage into his input.
If he doesn't have enough turns, he gets too much current. 47V at 30ma
into 1.5K could make for too much current into a LED.
He's obviously using his core evenly enough to get 71V at 11ma. The 71V
is probaly limited by core saturation, causing the unequal
voltage-current ratio. The 47V at 30ma may be close enough to the
linear range of his CT that we can expect 300ma at 5v, but then he may
have winding resistance issues bringing on extra secondary voltage drop,
and maybe too much secondary power dissipation.
I'd suggest running the CT into a 10-ohm power resistor and measuring
the resulting voltage. Or better yet, directly into an ammeter. This
would tell you very nearly the actual turns ratio, and whether the
ultimate current is low enough for a LED circuit (or a Zener, or even a
specially selected low-value resistor for your needs). Run it for a
while to see if the current transformer heats up. If it stays
reasonably cool for half an hour or so, and gives a reasonable current
into the LED circuit, you may be in good shape already.
Of course, you get a free power indicator with the LED's, too

.
John Perry