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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.
Belarus MTZ-82-L logging in Estonia (November 2021) Tractor "Belarus 3522" from Minsk Tractor Works Tractor "Belarus 5022" from Minsk Tractor Works with Caterpillar C18 (500 hp) engine. Some 3 million tractors have been built in the Minsk Tractor Works since 1948. In 2010, distribution of Belarus tractors in United States and Canada was re ...
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 ...
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
Tractor manufacturers of Belarus (1 P) Truck manufacturers of Belarus (2 C, 5 P) B. BAZ vehicles (1 P) BelAZ (7 P) Bus manufacturers of Belarus (3 P) E.
~American Engine Co. American-Abell Engine and Thresher Company, Toronto, Ontario [8] Amongst other models, built three-wheelers with a single wheel mounted on a fork perch bracket beneath the smokebox. [9] Ames Iron Works ~Atlas Engine Works; Aultman Co. Aultman-Taylor Machinery Co. Avery Power Machinery Co., Peoria, Illinois; A.D. Baker Company
The Volgograd Tractor Plant (Russian: Волгоградский тракторный завод, Volgogradski traktorni zavod, or ВгТЗ, VgTZ), formerly the Dzerzhinskiy Tractor Factory or the Stalingrad Tractor Plant, is a heavy equipment factory located in Volgograd, Russia.
This truck used General Motors-designed two-stroke engines and was a continuation of a truck developed by the Yaroslavl Motor Plant (YaMZ), who also built the engines. [2] Later on, YaMZ's own original engines were developed and implemented in the MAZ-500 series which was first shown in 1955, but only reaching full series production in 1965. [3]