enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Terex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terex

    In 1953, General Motors purchased Euclid, expanding the business to include more than half of all U.S. off-highway dump truck sales. Due to a 1968 Justice Department ruling, GM was required to stop manufacturing and selling off-highway trucks in the United States for four years and divest the Euclid brand. GM coined the "Terex" name in 1968 ...

  3. List of truck manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_truck_manufacturers

    Sterling Trucks (United States) Stewart & Stevenson (United States) Studebaker (United States) Scot (Canada) [citation needed] Tesla Motors (United States) Traffic (United States) UD Trucks (different models for U.S. market) Volvo Trucks (different models for U.S. market) Vicinity Motor Corp. (Canada) Walter (United States) White (United States)

  4. List of trucks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trucks

    This is an incomplete list of trucks currently in production and discontinued trucks (as of 2014). This list does not include pickup trucks , nor trucks used only in militaries. Some images provided below may show the outdated model.

  5. Hugo Lentz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Lentz

    When he was six years old, his father died and the family returned to relatives in Germany. He became an engineer in the Prussian Navy. [2] In 1888, Lentz founded his own machine factory in Vienna. At an exposition in honour of Alessandro Volta in Como in 1899, his first steam engine won the first prize.

  6. List of Mack Trucks products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mack_Trucks_products

    Early and pre-World War II truck and buses. AC series 5,5 ton truck "Old # 1"- Bus 1900; Manhattan Series- 1903; Junior Series- 1909; AB Series- 1914-1920;

  7. REO Motor Car Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REO_Motor_Car_Company

    Two years later, Olds claimed that he had built the best car he could, a tourer able to seat two, four, or five, with a 30–35 hp (22–26 kW) engine, 112 inches (2,845 mm) wheelbase, and 32 inches (81 cm) wheels, for $1,055 (not including top, windshield, or gas tank, which were US$100 extra); self-starter was $25 on top of that.

  8. Four Wheel Drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Wheel_Drive

    The Four Wheel Drive Auto Company, more often known as Four Wheel Drive (FWD), was a pioneering American company that developed and produced all-wheel drive vehicles.It was founded in 1909 in Clintonville, Wisconsin, as the Badger Four-Wheel Drive Auto Company by Otto Zachow and William Besserdich. [1]

  9. Hayes Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayes_Manufacturing_Company

    A Hayes-Anderson truck from 1933. The Hayes Manufacturing Company was established in Vancouver in 1920 by Douglas Hayes, an owner of a parts dealer, [1] and entrepreneur W. E. Anderson from Quadra Island, [1] as Hayes-Anderson Motor Company Ltd. [2] The company sold American-built trucks and truck parts for the first two years, then built their own trucks, because the trucks weren’t strong ...