{"id":11873,"date":"2026-03-06T14:34:23","date_gmt":"2026-03-06T06:34:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rippa.com\/?p=11873"},"modified":"2026-03-06T14:34:23","modified_gmt":"2026-03-06T06:34:23","slug":"mini-excavator-size-guide-how-to-choose-the-right-machine-for-your-property","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rippa.com\/de\/mini-excavator-size-guide-how-to-choose-the-right-machine-for-your-property\/","title":{"rendered":"Mini Excavator Size Guide: How to Choose the Right Machine for Your Property"},"content":{"rendered":"
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This is the most practical question and the one people overlook most often. If you can’t get the machine to the back of your property, nothing else matters.<\/span><\/p>\n Standard residential gates\u00a0in North America are typically 36 inches wide (914 mm). Some are 32 inches. Very few are wider than 40 inches unless you installed them specifically for equipment access.<\/span><\/p>\n What this means for your choice:<\/span><\/p>\n If your gate is 36 inches or less:\u00a0You need a machine that can fit through it. The RIPPA R10 and R13 both have minimum widths under 36 inches. The R10 is fixed at 900 mm (35.4 inches). The R13 telescopes down to 950 mm (37.4 inches)\u2014slightly wider but still manageable if you have a 36-inch gate with a little wiggle room.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/li>\n If your gate is wider than 40 inches:\u00a0You have more options. The R15 telescopes down to 980 mm (38.6 inches), which fits through a 40-inch gate. The R18 telescopes to 1,100 mm (43.3 inches)\u2014you’ll need a wider opening.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/li>\n If you have no gate or can remove fence panels:\u00a0Congratulations. You can consider any size based on your other needs.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n Real owner story:\u00a0A forum member bought an R18 without measuring his gate. It didn’t fit. He spent a weekend removing and reinstalling fence panels. He still loves the machine, but he wishes he’d measured first.<\/span><\/p>\n Think about the hardest job you plan to do. Not the most common job\u2014the hardest one. That’s what determines your power requirements.<\/span><\/p>\n Light tasks (gardening, small trenches, planting):\u00a0Any machine will work, but the R10 or R13 is plenty. Their digging force of 9\u201310 kN handles loose soil and small roots without issue.<\/span><\/p>\n Medium tasks (driveway repair, medium trenches, stump removal under 12 inches):\u00a0You want at least 10 kN of digging force. The R15 at 10.4 kN works well. The R18 at 15.8 kN gives you a comfortable margin.<\/span><\/p>\n Heavy tasks (large stump removal, pond excavation, heavy clay soil):\u00a0Look at machines with 15 kN or more. The R18, R22 (22.5 kN), and R32 (28.5 kN) are your options here.<\/span><\/p>\n Professional tasks (commercial excavation, large foundations):\u00a0The R57 with 45 kN of digging force is in a different class entirely.<\/span><\/p>\n A rule of thumb from experienced owners:\u00a0Buy for your hardest task, not your most common one. It’s better to have power you don’t need than to need power you don’t have.<\/span><\/p>\n This seems obvious, but you’d be surprised how many people buy a machine only to discover it won’t dig deep enough for their main project.<\/span><\/p>\n Common digging depths by project:<\/span><\/p>\n\n
Question 2: What’s Your Heaviest Task?<\/span><\/h4>\n
Question 3: How Deep Do You Need to Dig?<\/span><\/h4>\n