What appeared to be a simple little job: routing the control wires through the handlebars, ended up being very involved - but only because I spent a lot of time correcting a PO‘s bodges.
The project started off well: on Sunday I found a set of serviceable (rather than very good) handlebars from a Honda CB at an autojumble, complete with the holes to route the wires through - and including the left side switches, clutch perch and wiring already installed. I scrubbed off the surface rust and gave the handlebars a coat or two of some ’chrome’ aerosol paint I happened to have in the garage, ready to start on Monday (yesterday).
A little reconnaissance showed that a PO had butchered the bike a great deal: the kill switch didn’t work, neither did the horn and the wiring was all over the place - with some horrible domestic connectors here and there. Here is an example: inside the right hand switch a PO had cut the wires for the kill switch completely, leaving about 5mm stubs on both:
IMG_6718 by
Alan Othen, on Flickr
… I have no idea why. I found the remnants of the two wires joined together with a household connector where they emerged from the loom about 6” away. So, the first job was to disassemble the right hand switch (taking care not to lose that little ball bearing), solder on some tails for the kill switch, reassemble everything and repair the loom with proper shrink trunking. At that point I could pull the right side loom through the replacement handlebars.
Roger so far? The left side was much easier because remember the new ‘bars came with the switch and wiring. I tested the switches both sides with a multi meter and everything worked as it should. The next job was reconciling the wiring in the headlamp bowl, under the tank and for the horn (Which had never worked in my tenure) The last PO to work on the motorcycle clearly had no electrical knowledge, and had left a few things disconnected where he/she couldn’t work out where they went. Nothing is very complex on these little bikes though, so I soon had everything working and tidied up considerably. The horn worked - it had just been wired up wrongly.
Close to the end of the day I felt quite pleased with myself: the wiring was correctly installed, loads of mistakes were fixed, the connectors were reconciled and the motorcycle reassembled. I had linked up the clutch cable using the perch that came with the autojumble bars, and tried it out half a dozen times whilst adjusting it: the perch then cracked through and through: it had looked fine, but had obviously been stuck together with Liquid Metal or something similar. Ho hum.
There is no point getting cross about things like this, I’m pretty sure the autojumble seller had no idea of the issue. I had to provide a clutch perch, so the answer was to make up a hybrid switch with the replacement top half (turn signals) still attached to most of the wiring and staying on the bike, and the original bottom half (the perch and horn switch) being swapped in place. This involved just one soldered joint (for the horn) and the provision of a frame earth return (it obviously wasn’t a CB200 switch, but that doesn’t really matter).
I‘m pleased to report that everything worked fine the second time of asking: now the kill switch and horn both work fine - as do all the lights:
IMG_6725 by
Alan Othen, on Flickr
The handlebars are more or less correct. The switches are Honda CB, but not from a 200, and work just fine.
It is quite satisfying to get a job sorted out the way it should be; this one was a bit fiddly, but didn’t cost anything apart from a tenner for the handlebars and quite a bit of my time. The CB200 looks really smart now, and works fine apart from that mysteriously noisy motor:
IMG_6724 by
Alan Othen, on Flickr
… I have run out of ideas regarding what might be wrong. I’ll have a secondhand head here in a day or so. When that comes I’ll check it out and then delve into the engine again: check the head gasket, tachometer drive and anything else I can think of

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