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The M425 and M426 were general service load carriers, designed to haul load over roads, so they didn't need to be 4 x 4. The front axle was an I-beam, the rear was a double reduction full floating type. International used their own front and rear axles, Kenworth and Marmon-Herrington used Timkens. Brakes were full air with drum brakes on all ...
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
The Model F was a completely different type of truck than the Auto Wagon, with a steel ladder frame. It had a "Renault-type" tapered hood, oftern referred to as a coffin-nose or shovelnose. A front-mounted engine drove through a transmission and driveshaft to a geared differential rear axle.
These engines were used by IHC for some heavy-duty applications until 1935, although their own large engines (525 cu in (8.6 L) FBD and 648 cu in (10.6 L) FEB) had appeared in 1932. [6] The medium-duty 1930 A-series trucks received the all-new 278.7 cu in (4.6 L) FB-3 six-cylinder engine, with overhead valves and seven main bearings .
The last one built was an all-wheel drive IH 200HD cab and chassis, built in IHC's Springfield factory. [11] The Light Line was unable to compete with the Big Three in the light truck market; IHC's market share in this segment had never been higher than 9.5% and had dropped to 4.1% by 1969. [12]
The International Loadstar is a series of trucks that were produced by International Harvester from 1962 to 1978. [1] The first purpose-built medium-duty truck designed by the company, International slotted the Loadstar between its light-duty pickup trucks (initially the C-series, later the D-series) and the heavy-duty R-series.
Matching the development of the International S series, during 1989, the model line underwent a major update, becoming the International 3800. The 3800 was also made in a truck variant. In 2004, the International 3800 ended production, replaced by the International 3300 (a cowled-chassis version of the International 4300/DuraStar ).
In 1956, the International Harvester company introduced the Payhauler line of heavy duty off-highway rear-dump trucks, initially available as a 25-ton (23t) capacity rear-wheel-drive model. Unlike other haul trucks it had dual tires on the front (steering) axle and carried the load with the same weight on both axles.