Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Designed and first manufactured by International Harvester, later Kenworth and Marmon-Herrington also built them. The official model number was 542, to which are added a prefix letter designating the manufacturer of the engine (thus 'H' from Harvester) and a suffix number relating to the tire size. The M426 was a heavier duty evolution of the M425.
1 ⁄ 2-ton 4x2 1918 1,012 Light repair truck for vehicles White 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-ton 4x2: 1917–1919: Wide range of bodies Jeffery/Nash Quad [a] 2-ton 4x4: 1913–1928: 11,500+ Early models had 4-wheel steering Liberty truck 3-ton 4x2: 1917–1918: 9,452: built by 15 different manufacturers FWD Model B [b] 3-ton 4x4: 1912–1920: 16,000+ Wide ...
M116 chassis: trailer, 3 ⁄ 4-ton, 2-wheel (G748); chassis version of M101 trailer photos m116 trailer.php M116 carrier, cargo, f-t, soft skin, amphibious, Husky M116 carrier, personnel, full-track, steel armor not aluminum
HEAVY-TRACTOR-M1-IHC-TD-18 M1 heavy tractor, International Harvester model TD18 TM 9-1777A; M10A 10K Rough Terrain Forklift, Dresser/International model M10A; G99 M5 tractor crane IH. M5 tractor crane, 2-ton, light tractor, TD9; M3 tractor crane, 2-ton, International Harvester TD14; M5 tractor – 1942, a tracked artillery tractor
1 ⁄ 2 –1 1 ⁄ 2-ton truck 4x4 / 6x6: 1941 Produced by Dodge, initially as a 1 ⁄ 2-ton then later an upgraded and revised 3 ⁄ 4-ton 4x4 truck, it was produced in a number of body types, a 1 1 ⁄ 2-ton 6x6 version which shared many components was also produced; more than 255,000 of all versions were manufactured during World War II. [22 ...
A M911 tractor and a M747 trailer with a M60 Patton tank A M911 tractor at Schweizerisches Militärmuseum Full A Oshkosh M911 tractor hauling a load Prior to 1993, the U.S. Army employed the Commercial Heavy Equipment Transporter (C-HET), which consisted of either the M746 or the M911 truck tractor and the M747 semitrailer .
IH manufactured light, medium, and heavy vehicles for military use. Examples include a Metro van sold to the Czechoslovakian Army in 1938, M5 tractors and 2.5-ton M-5H-6 trucks for the US Navy and Marines in 1942, [59] and around 3,500 2.5 ton M-5-6-318 cargo trucks provided mostly to the Soviet Union and China. [60]
There is also a 15-ton (30,000 lb (14,000 kg)) low bed trailer, the heaviest possible off-road. A 25-ton (50,000 lb (23,000 kg)) low-bed trailer can be towed on prepared surfaces. [40] [41] Unlike commercial trucks the fifth-wheel can also pivot side to side, making a more flexible connection to the trailer.