Hi All,
I returned home a little earlier tonight so I though I would delve into some of the suggestions I have received.
This is all going to read as pretty confusing, as I have so many thought going around in my head about this right now, I'm not sure I'm going to elaborate clearly, without repeating some ideas just in a different way. If so, my advanced apologies.
First I took the points plate off tonight to look at the advance counter weights as Rick suggested. Not sure that did me any good as I'm not sure what the advance was suppose to be doing. I did notice that when I grabbed the advance b/w my thumb and forefinger, I could rotate it just a bit in one direction (maybe 5 or 10 degrees) until the weights would hit on the side of the advance unit (counter weights all the way out), and then I could return it to the starting point (counter weights in). However when I put a wrench on the hex nut holding the advance unit in, and then turned the motor over with that nut, the weights didn't move at all. As mentioned though since I'm not exactly sure what was supposed to happen, it could be working correctly?
While putting back together, I took the points apart to check on the fiber washer and make sure one of them went all the way through the opening to confirm the screw wasn't grounding out. unlike my old set of points which had one of the washer going all the way through the points opening, the new set had both washer each going half way through the screw opening. I considered replacing with the old one, but I didn't. This might be a point of contention in the future.
Once I put everything back together, I took an Ohm reading as suggested. Wouldn't have know to do that without the recommendation. I took it 1st with the ignition switch off, and next with the ignition switch on. I expected two different reading, however I read 1.5 Ohms in each test. So even though I'm not sure what kind of reading I should be seeing, that was at least encouraging.
When I originally rewired (which wasn't really a rewiring as much as a reconnecting of all the wires , I used the CB100 wiring diagram. As tpbmusic mentioned it is almost the exact same as the CB125 single, however since I only had the speedo and no tac, I used the CB100 diagram. Additionally, my front turn signals are grounded to the head light bucket as the CB100 diagram shows, instead of via a separate green wire as the CB125 wiring diagram shows.
I read somewhere that the green is normally the pathway to ground, however since it is a points based ignition, and the normal green ground wire connects to the points from the condenser, that the point plate then acts as the ground. I don't know it that's true or not, but it sounds plausible.
Also, just about everything I have read say a positive needs to go to the coil from the ignition (this would be the black wire as I only have the 2 wires coming from the ignition), and Red goes to the battery. Right now I have the black from the ignition going to the black from the coil. (not directly though, which I don't believe should matter, as all blacks are connected together at some point). I guess I'm presuming the black from the coil is the hot wire for the coil, and the blue is the ground, which as it comes out of the coil goes into the condenser as blue, and out of the condenser to the points as green? It all a little confusing to me.
The coil primary side only has the two wires coming from it. Black which goes to ignition, and Blue which goes to the Blue wire from the condenser. the only other wire is the green which comes from the condenser. with only the green wire from the points left to connect, the green from the condenser must go to the points. That being said, the blue wire coming from the coil (Female connector) can connect to the points wire (Male connector) however this leaves only the green and blue from the condenser not connected to anything. That would suggest they are to be connected together. This doesn't sound right though.
I originally had a ND X24ES-U plug, and a plug cap with a resistor in it. I reinstalled a NGK DR8EA, and purchased an NGK plug cap without a resistor. Prior to switching the resistor cap for a non resistor cap, I had good Ohm readings everywhere except when I placed the resistor cap on the plug wire - then nothing. Now with the non resistor cap attached to the plug wire, I have a good Ohm reading. If I remember that was around 15, which means 15K. With that knowledge it only tells me the old resistor cap was probably bad. Might tell someone that knows more about resistance, etc. something else. I may have been able to install a new resistor cap and still come up with an Ohm reading, but is more than 15K needed?
I'm not exactly sure what a mica insulator is, unless it's the fiber washers on the points. If it is, then the points spring, and the points wire connector are both on the outside, so isolated from the points.
One last thing for now, then homework for a bit. the arcing I had with the points open didn't occur on its own. it only happened when I accidentally touched the feeler gauge to both sides of the points with the ignition off. I don't know if that makes a difference or not, but thought I would clarify?
It sure is great brainstorming with everyone trying to help me get the 73' back up and running.
We'll get there.
Michael