brain55
Veteran Member
Customer complained that the loader didn't seem to have the power it once did and was slow lifting a loaded bucket. Not being from the school of "put a pressure gauge on it" I usually skip all that and eliminate the pump first.


Here's my flowmeter installed. At 2000 rpm the no load flow was about 10 gpm. At 1000 psi the flow had already dropped to 7 gpm and at 2000 psi the flow was less than 5 gpm. Had I put a pressure gauge in the system I'm sure it would have read real close to spec. Whatever that may be. With the flowmeter I don't need to know. If I would have still had 8.5 gpm or more at 2500 psi I would have started looking at other possible problems. Pumps can make pressure all day long but with no flow they won't do any work.
Brian


Here's my flowmeter installed. At 2000 rpm the no load flow was about 10 gpm. At 1000 psi the flow had already dropped to 7 gpm and at 2000 psi the flow was less than 5 gpm. Had I put a pressure gauge in the system I'm sure it would have read real close to spec. Whatever that may be. With the flowmeter I don't need to know. If I would have still had 8.5 gpm or more at 2500 psi I would have started looking at other possible problems. Pumps can make pressure all day long but with no flow they won't do any work.
Brian