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  2. Dingo Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dingo_Australia

    The TORO Dingo Mini Digger is a type of mini 'skid-steer loader', an easily maneuvered machine which can typically carry and load dirt, dig trenches, dig post holes and operate a range of attachments. The Dingo has a platform at the back on which the operator stands to operate the machine.

  3. Kanga Loaders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanga_Loaders

    Kanga Loaders is an Australian brand of compact utility loaders. [1] The company's headquarters are in Yatala, Queensland with 10 branches Australia-wide. Originally owned by the Jaden Group of companies and called the Dingo, [2] it was the first "stand-on" mini-skid steer.

  4. Compact excavator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compact_excavator

    A compact or mini excavator is a tracked or wheeled vehicle with an approximate operating weight from 0.7 to 8.5 tonnes. [1] It generally includes a standard backfill blade and features independent boom swing.

  5. Smalley (excavator) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smalley_(excavator)

    Smalley 425. 1977 1971 Smalley 5 Mk II excavator. A smalley is a type of small excavator with two wheels on a single axle. It had no drive to the wheels, moving instead by pulling itself along using the excavator or 'backhoe' arm. Once in location the machine worked as any other 360° excavator, with two fixed-adjustable front legs, and two ...

  6. Bucket-wheel excavator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucket-wheel_excavator

    In the 1950s two German mining firms ordered the world's first extremely large BWEs, and had three BWEs built for mining lignite near Cologne, Germany. The German BWEs had a wheel of over 16 m (52 ft) in diameter, weighed 5,500 short tons (5,000 t) and were over 180 m (600 ft) long, with eighteen crawler units for movement and could cut a swath ...

  7. Mitsubishi Mirage Dingo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Mirage_Dingo

    The "Dingo" name is derived from Bingo and its connotations of good fortune, but with the B replaced by D to represent Mitsubishi's Diamond logo. The "Dingo" name also sourced from a wild dog native to Australia, dingo (Canis lupus dingo). [1] In Japan, it was sold at a specific retail chain called Car Plaza.

  8. Dingo attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dingo_attack

    dingo Kawana Forest near Caloundra, pair of young dingoes killed the calf [61] £1000 worth of sheep 1941–8 dingo Tumbarumba, 13yo dingo "weighed 100 lb. and measured six feet from tip to tip." [62] at least 1000 sheep 1942 dingo Captain's Flat [63] 200+ sheep 1939 dingo Billa Billa near Goondiwindi [64] "many sheep" 1937 Alsatian-dingo cross

  9. Daimler Dingo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daimler_Dingo

    The Dingo remained in production throughout the war but to bring other production resources into use, the design was passed to Ford Canada, where an equivalent vehicle ("Scout Car, Ford, Mk.I", also called "Lynx") was built with a more powerful, Ford V8 95 hp (71 kW), engine, transmission and running gear.