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195.4 cu in (3.2 L; 3,203 cc) 4 + 1 ⁄ 8 in (104.8 mm) × 3 + 21 ⁄ 32 in (92.9 mm) 1966–1980 International Harvester gasoline I6 engines Engine Family Cylinder Layout Name Displacement Bore × Stroke Fuel System Type Years Produced HD Green Diamond I6 HD/GD 175 174.9 cu in (2.9 L; 2,867 cc) [11] 3 in (76.2 mm) × 4 + 1 ⁄ 8 in (104.8 mm ...
454(D179 3 cyl eng)/474(D206 4 cyl)/475 (Perkins eng)/574(D239 4 cyl eng)/674(D239 4 cyl eng) - all 2 wheel drive except for approx 25 built in 1977 with Kimco axle. Trans options - Torque Amplifier. Hydrostatic Drive offered on 454/574 models.
In March 2015, Navistar reported a first-quarter 2015 net loss of $42 million, or $0.52 per diluted share, compared to a first-quarter 2014 net loss of $248 million, or $3.05 per diluted share. Revenues in the quarter were $2.4 billion, up to $213 million or 10 percent, versus the first quarter of 2014.
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The team is backed by Dutch project management company Brunel International, and sponsored by ACE, Abel Sensors and Embrace Tech Startups. Brunel International are Volvo Ocean Race veterans, having had their first involvement in 1997-98. [citation needed] For the 2023 The Ocean Race she was renamed Team JAJO. [2]
1975 International 200-based ambulance in New Zealand. For 1974 the naming changed yet again: the trucks were now called 100, 150, 200, or 500 depending on the weight rating. External changes were minimal, consisting mainly of a new five-bar metal grille without the vertical dividers, nicknamed the "electric razor grille". [9]
The Nissan Diesel Big Thumb (Japanese: 日産ディーゼル・ビッグサム) is a heavy-duty commercial vehicle that was produced by the Japanese manufacturer Nissan Diesel (now UD Trucks) and sold between 1990 and 2014, although Japanese sales ended in 2005, a few months after it had been replaced by the Nissan Diesel Quon. [2]
The Navistar VT engine family is a line of diesel engines that was produced by International Truck and Engine (Navistar International) from 2003 to 2016.Developed as the replacement for the T444E V8, the VT V6 and V8 diesels were the smallest diesel engines used in Navistar vehicles, slotted below the DT inline-6 engine family.