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  2. Combine harvester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combine_harvester

    Tractor-drawn combines (also called pull-type combines) became common after World War II as many farms began to use tractors. An example was the All-Crop Harvester series. These combines used a shaker to separate the grain from the chaff and straw-walkers (grates with small teeth on an eccentric shaft) to eject the straw while retaining the grain.

  3. Gleaner Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gleaner_Manufacturing_Company

    From 1928 until 1954, Gleaner produced pull-type combine harvesters of both large and small sizes. The large models were intended for throughput and were the favored types for customer harvesters, while the small models were made for smaller, single-farm operations. Early "Gleaner-Baldwin" combines used the Ford Model A engine. The Gleaner ...

  4. Custom harvesting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Custom_harvesting

    As combines became more and more widespread, the demand for migrant labor decreased. Custom harvesters, owning their own combines, existed beginning in the 1920s, albeit on a small scale. [ 2 ] However, World War II caused a labor and materials shortage, and the custom harvesting industry experienced a great growth.

  5. All-Crop harvester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-Crop_Harvester

    The All-Crop harvester or All-Crop combine was a tractor-drawn, PTO-driven (except the All-Crop 100 and the All-Crop SP100) combine harvesters made by Allis-Chalmers from the mid-1930s to the early 1960s. Aside from small grains, these harvesters were able to harvest some flowers, as well as various grasses and legume crops for seed.

  6. International Harvester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Harvester

    These tractors had varied success but the trend going into the mid-1910s was toward "small" and "cheap". A 1911 one-cylinder 25 hp (19 kW) Type C Mogul. The company's first important tractors were the 10-20 and 15-30 models. Introduced in 1915, they were primarily used as traction engines to pull plows and for belt work on threshing machines ...

  7. AGCO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGCO

    Hesston 5670 round baler, in 2010. AGCO was established on June 20, 1990, when Robert J. Ratliff, John M. Shumejda, Edward R. Swingle, and James M. Seaver, who were executives at Deutz-Allis, bought out Deutz-Allis North American operations from the parent corporation Klöckner-Humboldt-Deutz AG (KHD), a German company which owned the Deutz-Fahr brand of agriculture equipment.

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