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  2. Avery Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avery_Company

    An Avery tractor pulling three sod cutters on a farm near Larned, Kansas, around 1916. The Avery company made many traction engines, such as the 1907 steam tractor model. At that time steam was the only form of power and the tractor resembled a miniature locomotive. In 1909, Avery began manufacturing gasoline tractors. [6]

  3. Rumely Oil Pull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumely_Oil_Pull

    The Rumely Oil Pull was a line of farm tractors developed by Advance-Rumely Company [1] from 1909 and sold 1910 to 1930. Most were heavy tractors powered by an internal combustion, magneto-fired engine designed to burn all kerosene grades at any load, called the Oil Turn. [2] Rumely Oil Pull, ignition & lubrication A running Rumely Oil Pull ...

  4. Advance-Rumely - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advance-Rumely

    Rumely's most famous product, the Rumely Oil Pull tractors, powered by hot-bulb engine using kerosene, was first developed in 1909 and began selling to the public by 1910. [ 1 ] Meanwhile, Advance Thresher Company was founded in 1881 with a factory in Battle Creek, Michigan .

  5. McCormick-Deering W series tractors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCormick-Deering_W_series...

    The McCormick-Deering W series tractors were a range of standard-tread farming and industrial tractors produced by International Harvester that were derived from the Farmall letter series row-crop tractors of the 1940s and 1950s. Branded by International Harvester as McCormick-Deering products, with the same styling and red paint as the Farmall ...

  6. Three-point hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-point_hitch

    For example, when the Ford 9N introduced Harry Ferguson's three-point hitch design to American production-model tractors in 1939, it was a light and affordable tractor competing principally with row-crop tractors such as Farmalls that did not yet have three-point hitches.

  7. Big Bud 747 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bud_747

    The first two Big Bud tractors out of the Havre, Montana plant were the 250-series and were purchased by Leonard M. Semenza of Semenza Farms in 1968 located between Fort Benton, Montana, and Chester, Montana on his 35,000 acre farm. The 747 tractor was designed by Wilbur Hensler [3] and built by Ron Harmon and the employees of his Northern ...

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