GoldenChick
New member
I picked up a Bobcat T190 recently and I’m still trying to figure out whether I actually have a lift issue or if I’m just expecting too much from the machine.
The reason I am second guessing it is because the machine runs well overall. Lift and tilt respond quickly, the hydrostats feel strong, and when I checked pressure at the auxiliary coupler I was seeing right around 3300 psi. The bucket also doesn’t leak down much after shutdown, so it doesn’t immediately feel like a blown cylinder or an obvious hydraulic failure.
Where I started questioning things was when using a tree puller. It will lift hard, but not enough to pull the rear of the machine up like I expected. That got me wondering if I’m dealing with weak lift power, a relief issue, a valve issue, or just the difference between a tracked machine and a wheeled skid steer.
I was also checking the machine specs while trying to make sense of it. The Bobcat T190 specs page here shows 66 HP, about 1900 lb rated operating capacity at 35 percent tipping, 2715 lb at 50 percent tipping, 16.3 GPM standard flow, 3300 psi relief pressure, and a 28 gallon fuel tank:
So on paper the numbers seem normal for a T190. I’m mainly trying to understand whether my machine is actually weak, or whether the way a T190 transfers weight just feels different than what people expect.
Anyone here with real seat time on a T190, T180, or similar Bobcat track loader ever chase this kind of weak lift complaint and find out it wasn’t really a failure at all?
The reason I am second guessing it is because the machine runs well overall. Lift and tilt respond quickly, the hydrostats feel strong, and when I checked pressure at the auxiliary coupler I was seeing right around 3300 psi. The bucket also doesn’t leak down much after shutdown, so it doesn’t immediately feel like a blown cylinder or an obvious hydraulic failure.
Where I started questioning things was when using a tree puller. It will lift hard, but not enough to pull the rear of the machine up like I expected. That got me wondering if I’m dealing with weak lift power, a relief issue, a valve issue, or just the difference between a tracked machine and a wheeled skid steer.
I was also checking the machine specs while trying to make sense of it. The Bobcat T190 specs page here shows 66 HP, about 1900 lb rated operating capacity at 35 percent tipping, 2715 lb at 50 percent tipping, 16.3 GPM standard flow, 3300 psi relief pressure, and a 28 gallon fuel tank:
So on paper the numbers seem normal for a T190. I’m mainly trying to understand whether my machine is actually weak, or whether the way a T190 transfers weight just feels different than what people expect.
Anyone here with real seat time on a T190, T180, or similar Bobcat track loader ever chase this kind of weak lift complaint and find out it wasn’t really a failure at all?