Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The A was incrementally updated with new model numbers as the Super A, 100, 130 and 140, but remained essentially the same machine. Like the smaller Farmall Cub, the Farmall A features a distinctive offset engine, displaced to the left over wide-set front wheels, to allow vision straight ahead. An International Harvester C113 4-cylinder in-line ...
The Farmall 404 is a medium-sized row-crop tractor, produced from 1961 through 1967. It was effectively the successor to the Farmall 340, using the same 135-cubic-inch (2,210 cc) engine, with options for gasoline or LP gas fuel. The 404 was the first Farmall of its size to use a three-point hitch, which had become an industry standard. Steering ...
[2] [4] [5] [6] Beginning in 1961 the line was restyled in the same manner as North American tractors, with more powerful four-cylinder engines than previous models. The A514 was mechanically equivalent to the British Farmall B-450 and resembled the North American Farmall 560. It was intended to replace the Farmall AM-7.
The Farmall Cub, A, B, 100, 130, and 140 models had the seat offset from the engine, allowing the operator to look directly at the ground under the tractor. This feature was called Culti-Vision because it was created to give the operator an excellent view of the cultivator teeth as they cultivated the vegetable row.
The McCormick-Deering W-4 was based on the Farmall H and used the same International Harvester C152 152-cubic-inch (2,490-cubic-centimetre) displacement gasoline engine, with options for kerosene and distillate fuels. A five-speed sliding-gear transmission was standard, with fifth gear disabled on tractors that were delivered with steel wheels.
Brian Daboll explains Giants' 2-point conversion failure Daboll explained during a postgame news conference that New York had been working on the 2-point play "for a while."
The Renegades are last in the XFL in yards per play (3.3) and net yards per play (-1.2), and are laying 8.5 points in the league where the teams only averaged 17 points per game last week.
The BM was a Farmall M, usually equipped with a wide front axle rather than the narrow wheels popular in North America. The BMD diesel-engined version was offered beginning in 1952. [2] Super BM and BMD models followed. In 1953, 53 BMD tractors were painted gold instead of red to commemorate the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. [3] [4]