The obvious fly in the ointment is the source of the chip. I've never had problems doing this.
Note paragraph 6 in the document that is attached to the first post in this thread in the section Register your keys. At this point you have the key that works in the ignition. "The red light comes on for 2 seconds and then flashes four times repeatedly. Which means that the system is in registration mode."
Note that when you register the second key, you have to take the first key out of the ignition, walk across the garage put it down. Pick up the second key - which you should have placed at the other side of the garage, walk back to the bike, insert the second key and turn on the ignition. If the antenna (that surrounds the ignition key slot) can detect the other key, then it will not work.
It has re-registered itself with the ECU and it now needs to set the same code for your other keys. If it cannot register a new key but it can re-register the old key, then I reckon that the 2nd key is the one at fault.
The only other possibility might be if the previous owner had obtained a new ECU and had a key made that works with it. Apparently that is possible, but from what I read a long time ago, you have to have additional keys cloned from the original.
The normal process is that you have to register the first key, and that then renders all other keys that used to work with the bike, useless - so if you have three keys and want to register a fourth, you have to start with a key that works and then re-register the other 2 and the new one. You cannot register a key that has already been registered with a different ECU.
The only way to find out is to buy a proper Honda key and chip. Fowlers have them in stock. They are about twice the price of the ones that I puchased and described in the pdf article.
https://www.fowlersparts.co.uk/parts/view/35121MBW601
Obviously, I cannot guarantee that that will work. But I am always suspect of anything that is a cheap fix, and there is only one way that you can find out.
Note paragraph 6 in the document that is attached to the first post in this thread in the section Register your keys. At this point you have the key that works in the ignition. "The red light comes on for 2 seconds and then flashes four times repeatedly. Which means that the system is in registration mode."
Note that when you register the second key, you have to take the first key out of the ignition, walk across the garage put it down. Pick up the second key - which you should have placed at the other side of the garage, walk back to the bike, insert the second key and turn on the ignition. If the antenna (that surrounds the ignition key slot) can detect the other key, then it will not work.
It has re-registered itself with the ECU and it now needs to set the same code for your other keys. If it cannot register a new key but it can re-register the old key, then I reckon that the 2nd key is the one at fault.
The only other possibility might be if the previous owner had obtained a new ECU and had a key made that works with it. Apparently that is possible, but from what I read a long time ago, you have to have additional keys cloned from the original.
The normal process is that you have to register the first key, and that then renders all other keys that used to work with the bike, useless - so if you have three keys and want to register a fourth, you have to start with a key that works and then re-register the other 2 and the new one. You cannot register a key that has already been registered with a different ECU.
The only way to find out is to buy a proper Honda key and chip. Fowlers have them in stock. They are about twice the price of the ones that I puchased and described in the pdf article.
https://www.fowlersparts.co.uk/parts/view/35121MBW601
Obviously, I cannot guarantee that that will work. But I am always suspect of anything that is a cheap fix, and there is only one way that you can find out.