I recommend you seek answers from the manufacturer;someone who had worked at Honda?
They were the ones which built these machines.
When you eventually find someone who gives you a reason for the purpose of the resistors,if they will explain it in detail,please share this information with the forum.
I would certainly like to understand it.
Gamma, with all due respect, I have reported what I have learned from the technical department of Honda The Netherlands and from Honda France innumerous times.
In the early 80's I've asked the chief of Honda's Technical Service in the Netherlands, the guy that receives annually Honda mechanics in the field to educate and instruct. I've asked him why I had a seemingly original plugcap that read 9K and the others were 5. He informed me they all should read about the same and advised: 5kΩ. That was common practice
then and it is
now. There is nothing to add.
And in the French manual that heas been composed in close cooperation with Honda France we read:
En cas de remplacement, il est important de monter des antiparasites ayant une resistance inferieure à 8000Ω sinon il y a perte de puissance d'allumage.In translation: over 8kΩ, no good.
Mind you: it is the only manual that mentions the resistance in caps (p.84). In all automotive literature you'll find... nothing, not even in Steinbuch's 8 volume standard work.
I'm no expert, but I can calculate. Effectively over 20kΩ in a secundary circuit is a lot. Therefore I personally will not risk reliabilty for a, so far only theoretical benificial effect on spark duration. Until proven otherwise, I recommend 5kΩ in either plug or cap, but not in both*. But I invite anyone to experiment and show proof.
*In Holland I know of two workshops that have advised to abstain from
R plugs as far as the old SOHC Fours and there's a UK mechanic that works on these machines on a daily basis who advises the same.
I find it sad that the community here is so uncritical and what I find particularly alarming is that there are quite a few members here that never miss the occasion to beat the drum of how many years they've worked in workshops and all but, in spite of that experience, never dare to
even ask. They prefer to blame me. For what? Well, for asking. Can you believe it?