More Power

dmignogno

New member

Equipment
BX25D, Woods RB60 Backblade, loader forks, BX42S Chipper
Aug 5, 2013
37
0
0
Lincoln, DE
Is there any way to increase the loader lifting power by a couple hundred pounds on a BX25D? My hydraulic pressure is adjusted to its high end of operating specs. Just would like a little more lift without having to buy a bigger tractor
 

CountryBumkin

New member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
BX2370 w/LA243, Bucket, Grapple, QA Pallet Forks, 60" MMM, rear blade & rake
Sep 27, 2015
568
4
0
Central FL
I think you would need to further increase the hyd pressure or maybe reduce the weight of the FEL (an aluminum bucket?). There's only so much these little tractors can do.
 

ehenry

Active member

Equipment
BX22, FEL, BH, 40" pto tiller, 42" Bushog Squealer, pto hole digger, B7300 w/60"
Mar 25, 2014
356
89
28
Canton, MS
Shim the relief valve. I think for each 1mm shim it increases pressure 39 pounds. Don't start shimming until you know what your pressure is on the FEL. Bxpanded sells a gauge kit or your can make your own. Kubota sells 1, 2 and 4mm shims. There are plenty of posts here and on other sites about this.

My BX22 pressure was between 1700/1800 lbs. I shimmed it to a tick over 2000 and have been quite pleased with the result.
 

bucktail

Well-known member

Equipment
L1500DT, 6' king kutter back blade, boom, dirt scoop ford disk JD212
Jun 13, 2016
1,236
182
63
MN
There's always a way; it just takes time and money, but upgrading to a bigger tractor and loader or getting a skid steer is probably the path of least resistance. You could swap out the cylinders for cylinders with a bigger bore, but then you'd start breaking the loader. You reinforce the loader and start breaking the tractor. Great excuse to get a skid steer.
 

North Idaho Wolfman

Moderator
Staff member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
Jun 9, 2013
29,155
5,452
113
Sandpoint, ID
Yes it sounds like you have just run out of tractor! ;)
 

maclean

New member

Equipment
BX25D
Jun 25, 2014
242
3
0
Lowell, Or
Be careful what you wish for...my BX25D is bone stock and I've blown up the tilt cylinder twice...once around 400 hrs and again just recently at 817 hrs.

First time I swapped it on warranty. Second time the dealer laughed at me.

Took it to a hydraulic shop...middle of nowhere and we have one in our tiny little town...guy is awesome. He explained the Kubota cylinder I brought him has no dead head like others. So when you use it on max tilt the entire weight of the bucket is on a 1/8" lip of soft cast iron.

-Mac
 

dmignogno

New member

Equipment
BX25D, Woods RB60 Backblade, loader forks, BX42S Chipper
Aug 5, 2013
37
0
0
Lincoln, DE
Be careful what you wish for...my BX25D is bone stock and I've blown up the tilt cylinder twice...once around 400 hrs and again just recently at 817 hrs.

First time I swapped it on warranty. Second time the dealer laughed at me.

Took it to a hydraulic shop...middle of nowhere and we have one in our tiny little town...guy is awesome. He explained the Kubota cylinder I brought him has no dead head like others. So when you use it on max tilt the entire weight of the bucket is on a 1/8" lip of soft cast iron.

-Mac
Did you replace the cylinders with different ones or did you rebuild the Kubota ones
 

WFM

Well-known member

Equipment
L3800
Apr 5, 2013
1,229
546
113
Porter Maine
When I took my tractor back for the first service at the dealer(I forget now like 50 hrs) I asked about the lack of lifting power. He said he could shim the hydraulic pump to help some. It is very hard to have the perfect tractor. I'd love the lifting power of 3000 lbs...not 1000 lbs like I have. But you'd need to spend $50.k to have a tractor that would do that and way bigger then anything I'd need. To big ? Or to small ? Its a fine line to fine tune the right model tractor. Just like building a shed. Always build bigger then you need.
 

maclean

New member

Equipment
BX25D
Jun 25, 2014
242
3
0
Lowell, Or
Did you replace the cylinders with different ones or did you rebuild the Kubota ones
First time the dealer gave me a new one for $120 "on warranty."

Second time the hydraulic shop used a lathe and turned a new head out of ductile iron...it was quicker than waiting 6+ weeks for someone to figure out how to get it from Kubota. Second time took $230 to fix the cylinder (both times add in the cost of a ton of hydraulic oil and filters and 6+ hours of blowing out and flushing lines.)

Hydraulic guy says if I do it again he'll just turn another head out of steel...pros...head won't break...con...something more expensive might break.

Go for bxexpanded's gauge and shim kit. If I wasn't broke from fixing my tractor I would order one. More power to me = more ways to break things.

-Mac
 

L.C. Gray

New member

Equipment
L3400, RTV500
May 14, 2016
105
0
0
Stephenville, Texas
If space permits go to larger diameter cylinders. Bigger the area of the piston the more force it will generate with the same hydraulic pressure being applied.

One of the above posters is right, more force = More stuff to break. You can quickly get into having the loader out power the tractor or as I put it, the tail wagging the dog, which isn't safe to be operating. If you really need more lift, you really need more tractor.
 

dmignogno

New member

Equipment
BX25D, Woods RB60 Backblade, loader forks, BX42S Chipper
Aug 5, 2013
37
0
0
Lincoln, DE
Thanks for all your info. I did buy the pressure gauge and shims when I bought the tractor 3 years ago. The pressure was under specs then so I shimmed it up into the spec range. I checked it again two weeks ago and found it was at the low end of the specs so I shimmed it up again. This time to just over the high end of the specs. I will live with that for know and always make sure that I am lifting as close to the pivot point as possible.