DW  TRAC

Itty-Bitty Brit: 1960 International B-275

International Harvester had a long history selling agricultural products in Great Britain going back to 1906. Until 1923, all IH product was American made and assembled. After that date, IH built an assembly facility in Liverpool, where partially assembled product was completed for the British market. In I939, IH set up a full-blown factory at Doncaster, but it was requisitioned for the war effort before it got into production. Civilian production restarted in 1949. After World War II, IH purchased the Jowett Motor Car works at Bradford and eventually began assembling a new small tractor there, the B-250, and all the succeeding tractors in this line were eventually produced there.

The B-250 was typical of British tractors of the era: small, diesel-powered, but feature-rich. We say “small” in the context of the American tractor. Over there, it was a medium-size tractor, roughly equivalent in size to the Ford Dexta, Hundred-Series or Ferguson T0-35 tractors. The B-250 was an immediate success in England from its intro in 1955 until production stopped in 1961.

The BD-144 was a long-running engine that was built into the ’70s. A larger bore DB-154 was also used on larger tractors. It had a robust five-main block with wet sleeves, five-ring pistons and a Ricardo-style indirect combustion chamber with a glow plug in each. Pintle-type injectors popped at 2,200 psi from fuel delivered by a CAV inline injection pump. Compression ratio was 19.3:1, the flywheel output was 35 hp at a modest 1,875 rpm and torque peaked at 95 lb/ft at a useful 1,500 rpm. These are decent outputs for a small engine running at under 2,000 rpm. Full load economy was a thrifty 2.3 gph, but at 75-percent power it used only a bit more than 1.5 gph.

In 1958, the B-250 got a bigger brother, the B-275. The B-275 shared a similar 144-cid engine with the B-250, but it produced five more horsepower. More importantly, the B-275 final drive was uprated from a five-speed, single-range unit to a four-speed, dual-range transmission (eight total forward gears with two reverse). Both tractors shared a differential lock, disc brakes, live PTO and live hydraulics. It was a pretty good combination of features and IH sold decent numbers of both types of tractors in North America.

American farmers were either hot or totally cold on the Brit-built tractors. There were many alternatives in the IH line, but it may have come down to their preference for gas or diesel. The British diesel was a far superior product to the American gas-start diesels. The British diesels were direct start with a glow-plug system and, with a more modern IDI combustion chamber, they were more fuel efficient to boot. If the B-275’s modest power output fit your needs, it was a great tractor.

The B275 had a category 1 hitch (upper link missing in this shot) with a 2,275-lb rating and a 540-rpm live PTO. A belt pulley conversion was available. Optional and shown here was a swinging drawbar. The B-275 was rated to carry up to 2,300 lbs in ballast for maximum traction.
No power steering was available in this era, but the controls were straightforward. At its introduction, this was one of the more advanced tractors on the market and included things like live hydraulics and PTO, as well as a manual diff lock. The hydraulics made this tractor one of the best loader platforms of the day as well. The B-275 didn’t have an automatic draft system, but it did have a manually adjusted weight transfer control that could increase the weight transfer to the rear tires and thus traction.

One interesting difference in the B-250 and B-275 versus American tractors is their badging. In the USA, an International badged tractor generally signified an industrial or conventional tread (”wheatland”) tractor. A McCormick badged tractor was usually an adjustable tread rowcrop tractor. The Brit tractors were badged “McCormick-International” and were definitely adjustable tread rowcrops. That was the norm in Britain but caused a little head scratching here.

The B-275 was built from ’58-’68 and sold here from ’58 through ’61. By the ’60s, IH was fielding a much better line of tractors in North America with more modern diesels. Approximately 55,000 B-275 tractors were built, but it isn’t clear how many made it over here. It was a hot seller in Britain and is definitely in the “Best Loved” category there. The B-275 was also built under license in India by Mahindra & Mahindra. In Britain, a more powerful version of the B-275 was introduced in 1961, the B-414. It used a similar but larger displacement engine called the BD-154 that had a larger bore and a revised injection system. After ’68, a revised B-276 tractor replaced the B-275 unit and was built to ’74.

Though a direct-start diesel with glow plugs, the early B-275 is generally considered a poor cold starter. Many attribute that to its inline CAV pump. The BD-144, and some upgraded engines based on the same design, used a rotary CAV pump and are reputed to be much better cold starters.

The B-250 and B-275 tractors are not common here and not particularly sought after or valuable, but they are greatly appreciated by those who know them. The 1960 B-275 shown belongs to the Haun family of Kenton, Ohio, and has been in the family since new. It was recently restored by Matthew Haun, who brought it to the 2013 Red Power show at Lima, Ohio, and it was the only one there. DW

[divider]Typical Specifications: 1960 McCormick-International B-275[/divider]

Engine: Four-cylinder IDI diesel, IH BD-144
Displacement: 143 cid
Bore & Stroke: 3.38 x 4.00 inches
Rated PTO Power: 32.88 @ 1,875 rpm
Rated Drawbar Power: 30.23 @ 1,865 rpm
Flywheel Power 35 hp @ 1,875 rpm
Rated Torque: 95 lbs-ft @ 1,500 rpm
Compression Ratio: 19.3:1
Transmission: Eight-speed (4×2)
Weight: 3,736 lbs
Wheelbase: 74.13 inches
LxWxH: 112 x 59 x 59.75
Fuel Capacity: 10.5 gallons
Tires: Front- 5.50-16, Rear- 11-28 (12-28 opt.)
Fuel Consumption: 2.287 gph @ max. power
Drawbar Pull: 4,641 lbs, w/10.9% slip, w/ max ballast
Top Speed: 14 mph

 

You May Also Like

VINATGE SMOKE

A 1950 Cat D315 Caterpillar was on a roll before World War II and rapidly dominating the crawler market. The war sped that roll up […]

A WITTE PAIR

1936 AND 1946 WITTE DIESELECTRICS Witte, pronounced “Witty,” is a storied name, in both the diesel and gas engine realms. The origins of the Missouri […]

Tractor Talk

Last Scream of the Jimmy In 1954, when Oliver needed a powerful diesel to one-up their competitors, they went to General Motors. The Detroit Diesel […]

Little Orange

1961 Allis-Chalmers D-15 Series I Allis-Chalmers went all out in 1957 to start a total refresh of their tractor lineup. The first to appear in […]