auburnblows
New Member
I was given a used Shindaiwa 488 over 2 years ago. I rebuilt the carb, put on new muffler, and filled with fresh gas. The saw fired right up and I was surprised how well it performed. However, at totally random times the 488 would act like it was flooding or muffler was clogged. Even at wide-open throttle there was not enough power to move the chain. Sometimes this "flooding" would last for seconds and at other times it would last until I cursed the saw, threw something, and eventually gave up and grabbed another saw. Over the course of the last 2 years I have changed both the primary and secondary ignitions, replaced the carburetor, put on new fuel lines and tank vent, swapped the kill switch, as well as replaced the flywheel. I was ready to give up and get rid of the saw when I came across this thread:
http://www.arboristsite.com/community/threads/shindaiwa-488-spark-plug-issue.216823/
I replaced the NGK BPMR7A plug with a BPM7A non-resistor plug and the shindaiwa 488 has now ran through 5 tanks of fuel flawlessly. Apparently my older 488 ignition does not like resistor type spark plugs even though the only manual I could find called for an NGK BPMR7A.
This site could have saved me a whole lot of time, money, and aggravation had I found the above thread earlier.
http://www.arboristsite.com/community/threads/shindaiwa-488-spark-plug-issue.216823/
I replaced the NGK BPMR7A plug with a BPM7A non-resistor plug and the shindaiwa 488 has now ran through 5 tanks of fuel flawlessly. Apparently my older 488 ignition does not like resistor type spark plugs even though the only manual I could find called for an NGK BPMR7A.
This site could have saved me a whole lot of time, money, and aggravation had I found the above thread earlier.