Dingo (mini diggers) and its applications

08 September 2014

Bridging the gulf between heavy industry and light construction, mini diggers provide the manoeuvrability and ease of use required for claustrophobic work sites. The diggers can literally turn on a penny, backing up to work in cramped areas that would confound their larger counterparts. Compact dimensions are the obvious starting point to relate the advantages of the diggers, but versatility is the ultimate projection of their abilities. A 4-in-1 bucket provides a Swiss-knife level of versatility to their frames, enabling the diggers to work on fine details during the laying of a foundation. More than this, the vehicles deliver all of the abilities of their larger cousins as condensed to a smaller scale.

If an operator has ever sat in the cockpit of a heavy-industry vehicle, managing the steering and operational controls of a mini digger isn’t likely to present an issue. In fact, the tighter steering and lighter frame makes navigating residential gardens a breeze. Loose fills of soil will support the wide wheels of the digger without caving in, and there’s far less planning require to get the digger from point A to point B because the light frame constitutes a smaller risk factor than any comparable large-plant machinery. Leave the 4-in-1 bucket off to the side of the property while clearing a garden, and quickly attach the mechanism with minimal tool usage ready to dig post holes or spread soil.

Consult the standard literature for a modern mini digger and see a few home truths that will surprise the average construction worker. These machines have the hydraulic muscle to match their speed and versatility. They can lift and manoeuvre loads that seem out of proportion to their compact size. This is a design aspect that’s developed as hydraulic science has evolved. Modern mini diggers generate immense torque, and the addition of the right 4-in-1 bucket magnifies this ability. Look to nations such as Canada for buckets that clear giant pine trees and plough the snow from roads before the morning traffic reaches full capacity. Back in Australia, mini digger attachments clear the dry dust from a car park, act as an auger, a one-man post hole borer, and all of this can be done without resorting to hiring a crew of workers and larger equipment.

Being comfortably affordable is the last feature to be added to a fully-rounded list of desirable extras on a mini digger. The frames that underlay the vehicles are solid as hardened steel, yet small enough to stay in the lightweight class, meaning the mini digger can fly over recently filled holes without fear of tipping over. Match this lightweight design to versatility, to attachments that cover somewhere around 70 different tools, and a contractor has the perfect setup for landscaping a garden or operating in a condensed building site where a residence is receiving a face lift or an extension. Optimized for movement, powered by uncompromising hydraulics, mini diggers are the perfect mobile machines for economical work carried out in closed-quarters

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