I think I figured it out.
I'll post pics when I get it made up.
Also think I figured the color change between the GREEN and White wires out.
The SOHC Green all goes to ground,White is to the Voltage Regulator, from the alternator, then sends power out through the black.
On the DOHC I'm guessing the White is the ground, as the black is the power wires.
That's backward:
on the SOHC the WHITE is the power TO the field coil, from the voltage regulator. The other side of the field coil is grounded. The BLACK is the IGNITION, which senses the bike's voltage (more accurately stated, "current") as the battery waxes and wanes.
The SOHC system is a current-limiter design. It uses the current that passes through a fixed-impedance coil (the voltage regulator's relay coil, to be precise) to pull a contact away from the HI charge contact inside the regulator. When this contact is open, the current to the field coil is limited by the big resistor on the back of the voltage regulator: this drops (or "slows down") the amount of power the alternator makes, so it won't boil out the battery with too much power.
If your 750 has low voltage, the first thing to do is clean the ground cable where it contacts the engine. By "clean", I mean remove it from the frame, wire brush it and the end of the engine's aluminum where they touch, then oil or grease it a little and reassemble. Next thing is to check the physical condition of all of the 12 connectors blades found in the system: they are now almost 40 years old, and corroded. They were intended to have a 5 year life in the 1970s.
Finally, check the rectifier you have, see if it has been electrically damaged. This happens when someone hooks up a battery charger of more than about 6 amp capacity (with it already plugged in and turned on). The open-circuit voltage on today's made-in-China 6 amp chargers can approach 50 volts if the unit is powered up and THEN cnnected to the battery: the OEM rectifiers on these bikes were rated as low as 15 volts on the K0-K2 bikes (check the Honda manuals, it clearly shows this spec), and only 40 volts until the K6. This peak voltage can punch tiny holes in the diode's junctions: after a time, these holes grow with current pasing through (via electron erosion, just like water erosion), and the rectifier slowly develops an electrical leak, much like a valve with a pitted face.
Also, severely cruddy connectors, and those with blackened nylon housings, should be replaced, as the black stuff is conductive (i.e., "electrically leaky") between the 3 phases of the alternator when the connector is warm.