When did AGCO stop making white tractors?

2001
The White tractor line was produced by AGCO from 1991 through 2001 when the White line was merged with AGCO-Allis to create the AGCO brand. The White name continues on under AGCO with the White Planter division.

Did AGCO buy white?

Today White is an AGCO brand. AGCO was formed in 1990 by former Allis-Chalmers executives. The executives took over Deutz-Allis and then purchased the White tractor line and Hesston Corporation brands in 1991. The remaining White-New Idea Company was purchased by AGCO in 1991 from Allied.

What tractors came with 5.9 Cummins?

Which Case tractors had a Cummins 5.9? Case offered tractors with 5.9L Cummins engines starting in 1985. You can find this Cummins engine in both the 1896 and 2096 models through the year 1989, when they were replaced by the Cummins-powered Maxxum series.

What engines do Case tractors use?

On display at the Case IH exhibit, visitors can view the N67 (6.7L), Cursor 9 (8.7L), Cursor 13 (12.9L) and Cursor 16 (15.9L) engines, which power Case IH equipment including the Puma®, Magnum™, Maxxum®, Optum™ and Steiger® tractor ranges, Axial-Flow® combines, Patriot® Sprayers, Titan™ series application equipment and …

When did AGCO buy white?

1993. AGCO purchases the White-New Idea business of planters, hay tools and spreaders as well as the Coldwater, Ohio, manufacturing facility. AGCO purchases the North American Massey Ferguson® product distribution rights, expanding the AGCO North American dealer network by more than 1,000 dealers.

What motor does Case IH use?

4.5/6.7L Engine.

Is Case equipment made in USA?

The Case IH manufacturing plant in Racine, Wisconsin, USA, is the home of the Magnum tractor.

What brand engine does Case IH use?

Case IH has the unsurpassed advantage of partnering one of the largest and most advanced engine manufacturers in the industry: FPT Industrial. Case IH FPT high-horsepower engines not only meet the stage IV emissions standard but can reduce fuel consumption by an average of 10 percent vs. equivalent stage IIIa models.