Excuse me, I got lost as soon as you started claiming a voltage drop on the positive side of the circuit was due to a problem in the negative/ground side of the circuit?? Just what is this V4 measurement?
Scottly, the V4-measurement procedure is in reply#3. Every automotive mechanic here is supposed to have learned this and where needed practise it.
Really?? I have never heard of a "V4 measurement procedure" in all of my automotive classes, nor in all of my electronics classes.
Well, you are never too old, are you
. The V-4 measurement is quite old school actually. Nowadays you plug a modern vehicle to a laptop and an app will spew out the data and can make the diagnosis for you.
Tenn's problem seems to be a tough one. I am not particularly familiar with the special wiring scheme of models for the US.
I agree the usual suspects are: fuse and fuseclips, the key
IGN switch, and - as far as US models - the starter switch.The latter has to endure quite some amps, whenever the key
IGN switch is switched to
ON due to that silly headlamp-always-on arrangement Honda had been forced to by US geniuses. CB400Fs for other markets didn't have that nonsense and I don't know if Honda has realised the possible premature wear of the contacts on US models.
In the
NEG path the usual suspects are: the connection of the battery
NEG cable to the frame, a loose and/or corroded connection of that thick green wire in the vicinity of the coils and/or other corroded connections to
GND.
The results of Tenn's measuring led me to conclude the resistance is in the negative path. But... he has some funny readings besides, concerning the headlight bulb. I wonder what your opinion is on that. What we don't know, is if someone has messed with the wiring before. In the headlamp bucket a mistake is easily made.
A possibility for diagnosis remains: disconnect the battery, switch the DMM to
LOW OHMS and try to locate the resistance, step by step. Not my favorite, but...