I’ve been using my loader for maybe the last 10 hours at 2000 rpm’s, would that have done damage? I figured if what I was doing was to tough it wouldn’t do it. But heck I don’t know.
My manual does say not to work it “hard” for the first 50 hours.
If your doing really heavy grunt work for extended time periods then running at or close to operating rpm is a good idea. I also go to my operating rpm for pto-attached implements that are supposed to run at 540 rpm rear, or 2500 rpm mid-pto on my machine, like for the chipper on back or blower on front.
When the engine was new, first 50 or so hours until 1st service, I just didn't run anything hard on the engine or tranny. Like only chipping small stuff, or going slower blowing through deep snowbanks, so as not to really heavily load or lug the engine when brand new, at full rpm or not.
Today I had a pile of nearly finished compost about 5 feet deep to turn with the loader, and ran at 2000ish rpm for a bit until it was obvious I needed more oomph, so set at 2200-2300 rpm and that was just right for the job at hand. My machine has 1130 hours on it.
Do not always need the engine at full working rpm to operate the loader or forks, and often a much slower rpm helps with finer-tuned hydraulics control. Just boost the rpm when heavier lifting and/or pushing is needed.
I almost never run the loader at full rpm. Only like when the forks are barely lifting a crate full of green firewood to move around. But usually 1800-2300 does the job.
FYI it was over 400 hours before my b2650 engine and HSD operated, and sounded "broken in". Hard to describe, but smoother running, a little quieter, greatest power responses, and cleanest oils between changes yet.
Just try not to "pedal to the metal" until after the 50-hour.