I have your exact machine, and for the last 11 years I find it simply anemic at anything below 2,000 rpms.
Now, am I in a hurry? Trying to get things done real fast? NO!
That little 3 cyl diesel can barely run at idle (1400 rpms) and the FEL will take long amount of time to move at that rate.
So - you say you are a newbie, that absolutly fine - not knowing is a good thing! KNOWING and then doing something that is not correct - well, we have other words for that.
The first thing you need to understand - and this seems to be an internal thought with most people running a diesel for the first time, is that it will HURT the machine to run it up in a higher RPM !!! The thought is, baby this thing and it will last a much longer time!
is that IT IS NOOOOOTTTT designed to run "well" at a low rpm!!
YOU say - why not? Each diesel - and O yes there a thousands of different models that all are somewhat different, but they all have a spot that makes "good" TORQUE - aka a max twisting force.
YOU want to run YOUR machine at THAT spot - that RPM !!!! Why? Because engineers did the math a while back and designed the bore and stroke to make THAT engine to be MORE efficient at a certain RPM.
Diesels are NOT like gasoline machines - which some can get way up there in RPM's - but they do that to make HP !
YOU want your machine to pump the hydraulic fluid at a rate that makes everything flow smoothly.
AND that is not at idle - AND no - running wide the hell open 100% is not what I am saying either.
Try 2500 and see what that does for you btw.
SDT said the same thing I am - he got the point a lot faster than I did!!!!