3.5 Ton Mini Excavator with Offset Boomfor Trenching, Landscaping, Foundation Digging

This is a 3.5‑ton mini excavator for the guy who works in tight residential yards and light commercial sites. It's bigger than the 1.5‑ton machines that fit through a gate, but small enough to tow behind a medium truck. You get real digging power without the transport headaches.

The machine is built around a one‑piece mainframe with bolt‑on track frames. The boom is an offset design – you push a foot pedal and the whole boom shifts left or right about two feet. That lets you dig parallel to a foundation while the tracks sit flat on the ground. No leaning, no scraping the house, no hand digging the last foot.

The engine is a three‑cylinder diesel, naturally aspirated, mechanical injection. No turbo to fail, no DPF to regen. It's loud but reliable. It starts in cold weather, runs all day on a few gallons, and doesn't complain about off‑road diesel from a farm tank.


Product Details
  1. The Offset Boom Gets You Right Next to a Wall
    You slide the boom sideways without moving the tracks. That means you dig a foundation trench while keeping the machine on the solid ground, not tipped over against the footing. Other machines make you choose between stability or reach. This one gives you both.

  2. The Final Drives Come Off Without Pulling the Track Frame
    When a drive motor fails – and eventually they do – you unbolt it from the outside. The track stays on, the frame stays in place. You swap the motor in a couple of hours instead of a couple of days. That's the difference between a bad afternoon and a lost week.

  3. The Auxiliary Hydraulics Have a Knob, Not a Menu
    You want more flow for a breaker? Turn the knob. Less flow for a auger? Turn it back. No scrolling through screens, no memorizing codes. You set it by feel and get back to work.

  4. The Blade Lifts the Machine High Enough to Change Tracks
    Drop the blade, lift the boom, and you've got room to slide a new rubber track on. You don't need a second machine or a floor jack. A couple of pinch bars and some sweat – the track is on and you're digging before lunch.

  5. The Exhaust Pipe Points Down, Not at Your Face
    Sounds small, but spend a day trenching in a backyard and you'll thank me. The exhaust blows toward the ground, not into the canopy. You're not breathing diesel smoke every time the wind shifts. Your head stays clear and your eyes stop watering.

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