Bobcat T76 Maintenance Schedule
Use this schedule as a field planning aid for the 74 hp class diesel. Typical values based on compact track loader service patterns; verify in the operator's manual.
| Service item | Typical interval | Field note |
|---|---|---|
| Engine oil | 500 hours | Shorten for dusty, hot, idle-heavy, or severe-duty work. |
| Hydraulic fluid | 1000 hours | Watch for contamination, overheating, slow functions, or leaks. |
| Filters | 500 hours | Includes engine oil, fuel, air, hydraulic, or separator filters as equipped. |
| Grease points | Daily to 50 hours | Daily loader arms, pivots, Bob-Tach, and attachment pins |
| Tracks / tires / running gear | Every shift | Inspect tracks, rollers, sprockets, and tension every 10 hours |
Always verify capacities, fluids, filters, break-in service, and exact intervals against your operator's manual and warranty requirements.
Skid Steers maintenance tips
Skid steers and compact track loaders usually fail maintenance discipline in the same places: grease points, dirty cooling packs, track tension, and skipped fluid samples. Put the daily walkaround next to the hour-meter habit. Clean debris from the belly pan and radiator screen, look for shiny pins that are running dry, and write down track or tire issues before they become a jobsite delay. Attachments matter too. A machine running a mower, breaker, planer, or trencher often needs more frequent inspection because shock load and dust accelerate wear. Treat this schedule as the starting baseline, then shorten intervals for demolition, forestry, hot weather, and dusty grading.
Related schedules
Track these intervals automatically with EquipHours
Set hour or mile intervals once, let crews log service in the field, and see what is coming due before a missed PM becomes downtime.