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The Regular was the first affordable tractor that could be used for plowing, stationary threshing, or cultivating. For most of its product life it was marketed as the "Farmall," with the "Regular" added when the Farmall F-20 and F-30 appeared as its successors. More than 134,000 were sold from 1924 to 1931.
A 1930s McCormick-Deering Farmall (F-14) at the Northeast Texas Rural Heritage Center and Museum in August 2015. Around 1920, as IH's motor cultivator died, a team of IH engineers had evolved the motor cultivator into an all-purpose tractor, replacing the horse in every job including cultivating. [5]
The McCormick-Deering W-4 was based on the Farmall H and used the same International Harvester C152 152-cubic-inch (2,490-cubic-centimetre) displacement gasoline engine, with options for kerosene and distillate fuels. A five-speed sliding-gear transmission was standard, with fifth gear disabled on tractors that were delivered with steel wheels.
McCormick-Deering 15–30 on the fields of the Ukrainian SSR in 1930 The International Harvester Agricultural Division may have been second to the Truck Division but it was the best-known subsidiary. One of its early products was the Traction Engine, a frame manufactured by Morton Traction Truck Company (later bought by IHC) featuring an IHC ...
Estimated value: $10 to $20. 2004-D Extra Leaf Wisconsin Quarter. Number of coin mintages (non-error): 226,800,000. Estimated value: $50 (for Extra Low Leaf version) or $65 (for Extra High Leaf ...
Titan 10–20,(1915–1922) Mogul 10–20,(1916–1919) Mogul Junior; Mogul 8-16 (1914–1916) McCormick-Deering 15-30/22-36 (1921–34) McCormick-Deering 10-20 (1923–1939) International 8-16 (1917–1922) McCormick-Deering W-12 (1934–1938) McCormick-Deering W-14 (1938–1939) McCormick-Deering W-30 (1932–1940) McCormick-Deering W-40, WD ...
McCormick Tractors International Ltd was a subsidiary of ARGO SpA until production was transferred to the ARGO Tractors factory in Italy and 'McCormick' became a brand only. In December 2006, ARGO SpA announced that the Doncaster facility was to close with the loss of around 325 jobs.
The Farmall Cub or International Cub (or simply "Cub" as it is widely known) was the smallest tractor manufactured by International Harvester (IH) under either the McCormick-Deering, Farmall, or International names from 1947 through 1979 in Louisville, Kentucky.