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The Hayes Manufacturing Company was established in Vancouver in 1920 by Douglas Hayes, an owner of a parts dealer, [1] [2] and entrepreneur W. E. Anderson from Quadra Island, [2] as Hayes-Anderson Motor Company Ltd. [3] The company sold American-built trucks and truck parts for the first two years, then built their own trucks, because the ...
The D Series was a range of light, medium, and heavy-duty trucks introduced in 1937. They had rounded styling and a new cab with a two-piece V-shaped windshield. Cab-over-engine models were also available. All types of bodies including semi-tractors were available. The D Series was replaced by the K Series in 1940. [12] [13]
The COE version of the International 9000 is a series of cabover trucks that were produced by International Harvester and its corporate successor Navistar. Introduced in 1981 as the replacement for the Transtar II COE, two generations of the model line were produced in North America until 1998. Subsequent production continued into the 21st ...
Cabover/COE Fleet Day Cab: Marmon 60-P: Undefined-1997 Cabover/COE Premium Day Cab: Marmon 86-F: 1968-1997 Cabover/COE Fleet Single Sleeper: Marmon 86-P: 1968-1997 Cabover/COE Premium Single Sleeper: Marmon 110-P: Undefined-1997 Cabover/COE Premium Double Sleeper
The all-wheel drive Unistar was introduced; the truck was fitted with a freewheeling front axle, powered when the drive system detected loss of traction from the rear wheels; the Unistar was sold through 1972. During 1974, the Transtar cabover underwent a second upgrade, becoming the Transtar II (CO/COF-4070B). [2]
The Freightliner Argosy is a model line of cabover trucks that was produced by the American truck manufacturer Freightliner from the 1999 to 2020 model years. Developed as the replacement for the FLB cabover, the Argosy was a Class 8 truck, configured primarily for highway use.
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Marmon-Herrington got off to a successful start in March 1931, when the company procured contracts for 33 T-1 4x4 aircraft refueling trucks, powered by 6-cylinder Hercules engines, followed by a variety of 4x4 and 6x6 vehicles for the U.S. and Persian armies, for use as general load carriers, towing light weaponry, mobile machine shops, and ...