Even if we don’t know the term, we’ve all seen badge engineering at work. Take a vehicle platform of one brand name, change it up a little, add new paint and a different badge and call it something else. Typically, it’s done within one large manufacturer that shares a platform among several brands. The Chevy Uplander minivan, for example, was sold as the Pontiac Montana, Buick Terraza and Saturn Relay. Back in the day, it was also done with tractors but in this case it highlighted the sad end of a storied tractor manufacturer.
James Cockshutt started in the ag business way back in 1870 by buying the rights to manufacture an American plow in Canada. The business grew and remained in the family with an expanded line of products. When the internal combustion engine age came in the early 1900s, Cockshutt jumped on the bandwagon by selling rebadged American tractors. They did so until after World War II, when they fielded all-news tractors designed and built in their own facility, the 1947 Cockshutt 30 being the first.
Several other all-new Cockshutts were introduced through the late ‘40s and into the early 1950s and continued the expansion. Regrettably, that expansion came at a time when the ag market was contracting. As a result, Cockshutt stock shares, which had been soaring, plummeted. In 1958, a mysterious group of corporate raiders bought up all the stock and took effective control of the company away from the Cockshutt family.
Denne historien er fra January 2021-utgaven av Diesel World.
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Denne historien er fra January 2021-utgaven av Diesel World.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
SEEING 2020
EMISSIONS FRIENDLY UPGRADES FOR THE 2020 DURAMAX
WHY THE CP4.2 FAILS
AND HOW YOU CAN KEEP YOURS OFF THE SCRAP PILE
FLASHBACK! SEMA 2018
THE MEGA TRUCKS ARE HERE!
LOOKS, SOUNDS, AND RUNS LIKE A DEERE
AN 800HP LBZ DURAMAX BUILT TO DO ONE THING— AND ONE THING ONLY
LITTLE ORANGE
1961 ALLIS-CHALMERS D-15 SERIES I
THE GAME CHANGER
INSIDE DHD’S RECORD-SETTING DURAMAX
DINOSAURS AREN'T EXTINCT
BRIAN JELICH’S TRAILBLAZING, 5.90 INDEX-RACING 7.3L POWER STROKE
FAMILY FARM TRUCK
JEREMY SCHMIDT’S 1948 CUMMINS-POWERED CHEVROLET LOADMASTER
BLACK HOLE CUMMINS
1964 CUMMINS VT12-825-M
KNOW YOUR 6.0L
THE KEY DIFFERENCES BETWEEN EARLY AND LATE MODEL ’03-’07 POWER STROKES