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1995 CAT 928F loader

NFDDJS

Active Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
27
Location
New Hampshire (USA)
I am meeting with a guy tomorrow to look at a 928F Cat loader. He sent me its and it looks very, very clean and has less then 2000 hours. I have had my Cat dealer do a history check on it and the hours are correct they have done all the service on the loader since they sold in back in July of 1995. It has CAB HEAT , A/C R/C BASE EDGE, PREHEATER, 4 SPEED, 20.5 R25 XTLA tires. Anything I should look for? Any known problems that I should check on this loader? I am while I am looking at it taking oil samples and having them all checked out before I pick it up. With such low hours I am hoping to get many good years out of this loader loading mulch, salt, sand, and doing snow removal.

Any help would be great
Thanks
 

NFDDJS

Active Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
27
Location
New Hampshire (USA)
Also have any of you used these 928F loaders how did you like them? What kind of hours have you been seeing before engine and transmission problems or over hauls are needed?
 

kenworth

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2010
Messages
109
Location
Central Washington State, USA
Occupation
Jack of a Few Trades, Master of None
I would have the coolant checked for diesel fuel to make sure there is not problem with injector sleeve o-rings.
I don't know for sure if this could be a problem on your engine but it was a problem on an CAT engine in a truck that I bought.
I did not find out about it until after I bought the truck and had to have it fixed.
Next time I will have all the fluids anaylized, oil, anti-freeze, hydraulic, and fuel before the purchase. It will save you money in the long run.
Doing this on any piece of equipment you are going to buy is cheap insurance.
The machine your looking at sounds like good one if it passes all the fluid anaylisis tests.
Let us all know what happens.
 

D&GExcavating

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2010
Messages
341
Location
Minnesota
I know it's not the same size, but we have a 938F that we use for a yard loader (loading trucks, pushing up gravel piles, loading and unloading stuff off trailers). We bought it with 5,000 hours and it's up to about 10,000 now. The only real problem we had with it was a worn spring in the injector pump that made it lose power. Its a great loader to operate, no complaints
 

pwrstroke6john

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 4, 2007
Messages
233
Location
Texas
With only 2000 hours on a 17 year old machine you should be golden unless the loader was beat on left and right.
 

NFDDJS

Active Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
27
Location
New Hampshire (USA)
Fluids all came back good, picking it up monday and hopping that we get some snow so we can put some hours on it and check them again... I am going to switch it over to all Amsoil synthetics so I hope that will help it last. In about 3 weeks we are getting 400 yards of mulch so I will let you all know then how it runs. Keeping my fingers crossed...
 

rare ss

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2011
Messages
460
Location
Western Australia
only drama's with low houred older units is you may see leaks from the seals going old and hard, as mentioned the engines did have issues with the injector sleaves but you should be pretty right with it, sounds like a gem with those sort of genuine hours on the clock, be sure to get the uni-joint a good grease when you service it too
 

john1066

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2009
Messages
211
Location
attleboro ma
We have a 1994 950f with 20000 hours on it and still going strong also had a 94 938f that had 18000 and never had anything done. Good luck with the new loader
 

NFDDJS

Active Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
27
Location
New Hampshire (USA)
That is a good thing to know for sure, I am hopping with all new fluids and us keeping up with the small stuff it will last awhile... We had been looking for a 938 but didnt really have any luck finding one at all with less then 10k hours that was under $60k
 

GeoffD

Charter Member
Joined
Nov 16, 2003
Messages
32
Location
Cumberland County Maine
Occupation
Operations Manager
Don't bother with the Amsoil, just use a high quality oil in the machine, and sample and change filters as needed. Believe it or now Cat Oils do cost more, but have many advnatages over some.
 

NFDDJS

Active Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
27
Location
New Hampshire (USA)
Well things didnt work out and I am not happy at all. I told my dealer I wanted the loader last week and told them I would pick it up today after 3pm. I drove the 3 hours to get it and showed up and they sold it this morning to another person... Not very happy... It was not my sales guy fault he put a hold on it and everything but they still sold it out from under him and I, we are both pissed off about the same amount... So now I am back in the hunt for a new machine and sold my backhoe to buy this loader and now having nothing with 3 snow removal contracts... I guess the lesson here is never let one go till the other is in the lot...
 

ibleedyellow

Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2012
Messages
15
Location
Colorado
Occupation
sales
What the point of reserving a machine if someone else at the dealer can still sell it? weak! I would be more than upset..
 

TCS

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2012
Messages
76
Location
ct
Hope it wasn't our local CAT dealer here in Ct. I have done business with them for years and they were always very good to deal with.
 

NFDDJS

Active Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
27
Location
New Hampshire (USA)
No I am still looking... I have been looking at a couple of 2009 Cat 928 loaders with less then 1000 hours of all of them. They dealer has about 15 of them so we are taking prices now but I am in big rush, most of what we do with the backhoes and loaders is snow removal. I have a large contract for next winter and I have to get one for that but untill then am waiting for a deal to come alone. I am going to play the "you sold a machine I had on hold" card when time come for final numbers.
 
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