Buster Brown
New member
Start with the battery terminals and the ground. take them apart, clean them, coat with dielectric grease and reassemble, making sure they are tight. Move to the battery ground, and to the starter and starter relay connections.
Look at the starter switch as well. The contacts inside the switch may be dirty, or worn down so their connection is uncertain. It may be time to replace the switch, or see if there isn't some rehab work you can do with some contact cleaner or solder.
You can check out your battery pretty easily while you are at it. A fully charged battery should read about 12.6v at rest, should not drop below 10v while cranking, and should read about 14v when charging, maybe 13.1v at idle.
The problem you are facing is that your once-reliable Honda electrics, which might have still been pretty good at age 20, are now well past 30. Oxidation and dirt are finding their way into the connections, and plastic insulation is getting brittle.
Look at the starter switch as well. The contacts inside the switch may be dirty, or worn down so their connection is uncertain. It may be time to replace the switch, or see if there isn't some rehab work you can do with some contact cleaner or solder.
You can check out your battery pretty easily while you are at it. A fully charged battery should read about 12.6v at rest, should not drop below 10v while cranking, and should read about 14v when charging, maybe 13.1v at idle.
The problem you are facing is that your once-reliable Honda electrics, which might have still been pretty good at age 20, are now well past 30. Oxidation and dirt are finding their way into the connections, and plastic insulation is getting brittle.