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The International Travelall is a model line of vehicles that were manufactured by International Harvester from 1953 to 1975. A station wagon derived from a truck chassis, the Travelall was a forerunner of modern people carriers and full-size sport utility vehicles. [1]
K-Series panel truck (1940s) Travelall L-Series panel truck (1952) Travelall R-Series Travelall R-Series, 2-door (1953–1957) Travelall R-Series, 3-door (1956–1960) Travelall R-Series, 4-door (1961–1975) Commercial variations (modified by Springfield Equipment Company) Travelall School Bus; Travelall Ambulance; Travelall Airport Limo
New for 1968 was the option of AMC's 232 cubic inch inline-six engine, rather than International's own BG-series six. [11] The Travelall was considered a version of the light-duty pickup range, rather than a separate model, until major changes to the bodywork took place in 1969 for the 1970 model year.
With the truck and engine divisions remaining following the 1985 sale of the agricultural division, International Harvester Company changed their corporate name to Navistar International in 1986. Today, Navistar International's subsidiary, International Truck and Engine Corporation , manufactures and markets trucks and engines under the ...
1958 A-120 Travelette 4x4 (showing three-door cab) International introduced the Travelette for 1957 production. Based on the newly introduced A series pickup truck, [4] the Travelette added a rear seat to the cab by using the body structure of the Travelall wagon (analogous to the full-size SUVs of today), including its second passenger-side door. [5]
Mid-1920s heavy-duty International truck (Models 33-103) 1924 Model 103. 1931 A-2. 1935 C 1. ... The Travelall station wagon and Travelette crew-cab pickup were also ...
International B-120 4x4 flatbed truck. For 1959, the B series replaced the A series. [2] This was the first of the series to feature V8 engines as an option, of either 304 ci or 345 ci. [3] The usual engines were International's 'Diamond' series of inline-sixes. The B series had twin headlights, mounted above each other.
In addition to agriculture and construction, International offered a range of trucks from consumer-grade pickup trucks (Light Line) to heavy-duty commercial trucks along with the first sport-utility vehicles (the Travelall truck-based wagon and the offroad-oriented Scout).