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Belarus MTZ-820 in Begeč, Serbia. Up to the 1950s MTZ had not produced wheeled tractors, tracked crawler tractors being more common. These early tractors were essentially re-claimed tanks, with the gun turret removed and a flatbed, winch, crane or dozer blade added; the tractors saw more use in land reclamation and forestry applications rather than agriculture.
Since 2010, distribution of Belarus tractors in the US and Canada is carried on through a local distributor, MTZ Equipment Ltd. [3] In 2015, MTZ produced 2,424 tractors, an increase of 45% compared to the previous year (1,648 tractors). [4] In 2017, 92.1% tractors of 31,011 produced were exported.
Pages in category "Tractor manufacturers of Belarus" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. M. Minsk Tractor Works
1999 Belarus stamp set commemorating MAZ. In 1954, MZKT, the Minsk Wheeled Tractor Plant, was founded to develop artillery tractors; it then developed a series of heavy weapons transporters for the military of the USSR, including heavy offroad trucks such as the MAZ-537 and MAZ-7310. [3] It was a division of Minsk Automobile Plant (known as MAZ ...
Furthermore, the tractor's sheer size often resulted in soil degradation. [citation needed] Kirovets tractors were imported to the United States and Canada for a time under the Belarus brand. They have recently been reintroduced under the MTZ brand. [2] [3] K-700s and its variants are still used today in former east bloc countries.
Currently 98% of MAZ-MAN comply with Euro-3, while sale to the EU would require Euro-5 at least, Euro-6 by 2014. In 2004, the joint venture made 272 vehicles, which is 45% higher than 2003. At the same time in 2003, output in comparison with 2002 increased by 50%. 28 November 2005 MAZ-MAN sold 1000 of the first MAZ-MAN tractor to customers.
Russian President Vladimir Putin got an unusual gift for his 70th birthday on Friday: a tractor. As the leaders of several ex-Soviet nations met at the Czarist-era Konstantin Palace in St ...
All other tractors produced in the UK at that time were sold as International Harvesters or Internationals. [5] The B-450 was a restyled version of the McCormick International BWD-6, sold between 1957 and 1970. [1] [6]