Points-1600
Basic Diagnostic skills fix anything
Feb. 02 2021
Points-375
Feb. 02 2021

Thanks to a friend who bought two Honda CT-90s, I recently found myself assisting in the diagnosis and repair of these esoteric antique cycles. In June 1963, Honda debuted this lightweight, small cc (barely a) motorcycle. They were so popular that the Beach Boys wrote the very popular tribute song: ‘Little Honda’.

Plagued with an occasional no-start, an inoperative headlight, and poor acceleration (poorer, that is, than the normal poor acceleration). The diagnosis of the electrical issues would involve some basic voltage drop measurement techniques that work well on a Dodge or a dishwasher. The lack of power would involve using some techniques that I haven’t employed since a Yugo was a new car. This bike, like the cars of its time, was not ODB-II. It was OBD-NONE.
Honda Bike


Honda CT90 ignition diagram
 

I started my diagnostics by tackling the starting problems. The bike would start on the first kick sometimes. Other times it had no spark. A quick check confirmed that the battery would put out its rated 6 volts of direct current (VDC) with the load of a headlight bulb applied. Knowing that the battery was good, I had to determine if the voltage was making its way to the ignition system. While the ignition coil is a bit hard to get to, the ignition switch wiring is accessible, so I thought I would start there. The ignition switch is fed by the one and only fuse (15 AMP) that in turn is connected to battery positive. With the switch installed in the electrical system I checked for B+ of 6 VDC at the Blue/Red wire where it enters the switch. Voltage was present. But is the switch any good? I placed the DVOM leads on the switch terminals, one lead per terminal, and cycled the switch on and off. Sometimes the voltage drop across the switch contacts was an acceptable one tenth (0.1) of a volt. Cycling the switch repeatedly would occasionally produce a 5 VDC drop.

 

Replacing the defective switch was one option. (Surprisingly, you can still buy many of the parts for this 53-year-old bike that is eligible for AARP membership.) I thought I would give a contact cleaner/contact lube spray a chance to work its magic. With a good soak and time to dry, the switch was back in full operation and intermittent no start was checked off my list.

With the bike running, I was still in electrical diagnosis mode. I thought I would determine why the single bulb, dual filament headlight would not work on high or low beam. As a side issue, the Neutral and High Beam indicator lights in the instrument cluster were also inoperative. The wiring diagram showed that all three lights shared a common ground connection inside the headlight housing.


I was doing my voltage checking at the ground ring terminal in the headlight housing. With the headlight switch ON, a check of voltage on the B+ side of the bulb showed the expected battery voltage. When checking the ground side of the bulb, I encountered battery voltage again instead of the expected near-zero volts. Clearly, there was a weak ground. The ring terminal has two ground wires crimped into it. Those wires go to the indicator lights and the headlight bulb ground shell. When I gave those green wires a little tug, they both exited the crimp. An application of a new ring terminal, with both crimp and solder, fixed that connection for the next 50 years.

Honda Bike Headlight

 

 
Honda 90 Points Diagram
Now onto the lack of power. The ignition system is pure old-school. Points, condenser, and mechanical spark advance perform the switching duties for the coil primary. Removing the point plate revealed the mechanical advance counterweights were frozen in the full spark retard position. Disassembly, cleaning and lubing brought the advance mechanism back to functionality. Dressing the points with a point file that hasn’t been used in 30 years and setting the point gap and timing to spec brought the fire-breathing dragon back to its full zero-to-45 MPH in 25 seconds performance. A little cleaning and lubing of the chain, and the job was finished.


So, what did I learn here? Using voltage drop testing techniques serve me well no matter what electrical maladies I tackle. What else did I learn? I learned that I still remember a few things from decades ago and that I will probably never touch point ignition again.

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