OK, just replaced the on/off relay. No dice ! There is at least some voltage to the relay...to two contacts. 13+ volts. Also voltage to the hi-lo realy. I dont see any bare wires, etc. Any suggestions ? Replace the hi-lo relay ? Seems my last hope with my limited electrical prowness. Thanks for any help offered !!!
Hi-lo relay should not have any voltage unless the engine is running. On/Off relay should have battery voltage at two terminals when the key is on. Both terminals are supplied by the headlight fuse, One terminal is the coil, which is grounded by the ECU on the Yellow/Black wire. A really simple test would be to ground that wire with the key on. Lights should come on. At least you should get 12 volts on the Green/Blue wire which "feeds" the hi/lo relay.
First test: Remove the connector from the headlight and look for continuity to ground on the black wire. If the lights aren't grounded they aren't gonna turn on.
Second test: With key on look for battery voltage at the red/yellow and blue/black wires on the on/off relay. no voltage anywhere else.
Third test: ground the yellow/black wire and see if the green/blue goes hot. If you've plugged the lights back in they should be on now.
If all of that happens then the on/off relay is correct.
At the hi/lo relay, key on, on/off relay NOT grounded at the yellow/black wire, and dimmer switch in low beam, there should be no voltage on any terminal.
Flip the dimmer to high and you should get battery volts on the green/black wire.
Ground the yellow/black at the on/off relay and the hi/lo relay should show battery volts at the green/blue wire and either the yellow wire or the green wire, depending on the dimmer switch position.
If all of that is correct, then it looks like the ECU is not grounding the yellow/black wire on engine start. I don't really know how that could happen, but I'd recheck continuity on the yellow/black wire all the way from the on/off relay to the ECU connector, with the ECU connector unplugged. The test in the post right above mine will check that grounding by the ECU.
Last resort. If this were my bike, and I could make the lights work by manually grounding that yellow/black wire, then I would simply ground it. Lights will come on with the key instead of engine start, so you'll be aware of battery issues sooner than other FJR riders (since you'd be cranking with the lights on) but otherwise it should be completely functional.