Sorry, what I meant to say was multimeter.
The setting I have on my multimeter for checking resistance has Ω on it, and on that it goes from 200-2000k. I have it set on the 200Ω setting. I hope thats right.
It probably matters if I connect the ground lead of my multimeter to the horn switch plate or the horn switch wiring (The solder bead over it rather). Because this is what I've found out:
With the multimeter red lead on the black harness wire, and the black lead on the horn switch plate, I got a reading of 2.0-3.0 (fluctuated a little) with the horn pushed and not pushed.
But, when I have the red lead on the black harness wire, and the black lead on the horn switch wire itself, I got no reading, horn pushed and not pushed.
Just so I understand this right, this is how the wiring of the whole thing goes:
Horn wires to the harness wires -> black harness wire to power -> green harness wire to horn switch button. Right?
If I'm getting no reading at all at the horn switch wire, I guess I should try and unscrew it because it is quite corroded, and that is probably the obvious problem.
What of my multimeter results though, indicates the switch is bad?