Taylor123
New member
Hi all,
Let me start by saying I am fairly new to these forums, and to working on hydraulics,
I have a bobcat T136, which was built to be a dedicated trencher with a backhoe and blade on the front. Before I bought it, it has been converted to have a 3PT on the back and a forklift on the front. I use it at my cabin to move logs and slash piles around.
When I bought it the engine wouldn't start, simply because it was run dry. I bled the system and the Kubota V1702 is acting and sounding very healthy.
That being said the hydrostatic system does not seem to have a lot of power. Which I would expect it to have being that it was a trencher. It seems to labor quite a bit when I traveling, and labors even more when trying to use the steering or activating any other hydraulic cylinders when in motion. I have flushed the fluid and put in new filters.
Does anyone have any advice as to where I should start to look and what parts I should inspect to see if the system is operating properly?
Any advice would be very much appreciated!
Thanks
Taylor
Let me start by saying I am fairly new to these forums, and to working on hydraulics,
I have a bobcat T136, which was built to be a dedicated trencher with a backhoe and blade on the front. Before I bought it, it has been converted to have a 3PT on the back and a forklift on the front. I use it at my cabin to move logs and slash piles around.
When I bought it the engine wouldn't start, simply because it was run dry. I bled the system and the Kubota V1702 is acting and sounding very healthy.
That being said the hydrostatic system does not seem to have a lot of power. Which I would expect it to have being that it was a trencher. It seems to labor quite a bit when I traveling, and labors even more when trying to use the steering or activating any other hydraulic cylinders when in motion. I have flushed the fluid and put in new filters.
Does anyone have any advice as to where I should start to look and what parts I should inspect to see if the system is operating properly?
Any advice would be very much appreciated!
Thanks
Taylor