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I'm not sure I agree with your belief that continuity is a better indication of circuit health. It takes virtually nothing to get continuity. Resistance on the other hand is a measurement of the quality of the signal and will indicate shorts, corrosion, poor connections, etc.The Key switch does need to be grounded itself via the mounting hardware. The handlebar switches are also grounded via their mounting to allow power (from Black, BR/WHT, etc) to be transferee and delivered to a component.Dave, I think your earlier measurements indicate a poor quality switch.
Switch is normal. Red to black and brown to brown/white respectively. Black feeds back to brown/white (then brown) through light switch. Park just switches red to brown (tail only). When you switch to on you should have 12v at brown/white, check that.
Quote from: Maurice on May 07, 2015, 06:50:23 PMSwitch is normal. Red to black and brown to brown/white respectively. Black feeds back to brown/white (then brown) through light switch. Park just switches red to brown (tail only). When you switch to on you should have 12v at brown/white, check that.Ok, I'll check that tomorrow morning. What do you mean by light switch? The high/low?---1978 Honda CB550K
Yes sounds right. That yellow/black tube is what connects tail light and instruments. It's the same as the '78 750 seems like.That's why I said "trace" because your wiring may be modified, your bike sure is. And the way the wiring is on the diagram yes you could simply have the taillight fuse out. Hope it's that simple.Ride on.
If they're the old glass fuses, sometimes they blow just looking at them. Utter crap. Replace with modern blade ones with holder from HondaMan.
Dumb Question: Any unshielded wiring coming/going to the taillight (near grommets, etc.)?
I like the metal fab work. The upholstery is very impressive - you may try to tighten some of the corners so it takes in some of the small slack areas. Better than anything I could do!!
Dave - what are you using for a rear muffler hangar? Picture is too far for my old and worn out eyes...
Quote from: CB750 Cafe Racer Fan on May 08, 2015, 10:59:43 PMI like the metal fab work. The upholstery is very impressive - you may try to tighten some of the corners so it takes in some of the small slack areas. Better than anything I could do!!Thanks! Yeah I know it's a little baggy in some areas. I've upholstered things before but with less "shape" than this. My old seat was pretty plain. A learning experience for sure. ---1978 Honda CB550K
Quote from: DaveBarbier on May 09, 2015, 04:16:08 AMQuote from: CB750 Cafe Racer Fan on May 08, 2015, 10:59:43 PMI like the metal fab work. The upholstery is very impressive - you may try to tighten some of the corners so it takes in some of the small slack areas. Better than anything I could do!!Thanks! Yeah I know it's a little baggy in some areas. I've upholstered things before but with less "shape" than this. My old seat was pretty plain. A learning experience for sure. ---1978 Honda CB550KI hope that didn't come off the wrong way. The form of the seat is excellent.