[Farmall] ih bolts

Jim Becker mr.jebecker at gmail.com
Wed May 27 20:38:42 PDT 2015


My understanding is that West Pullman was shut down March 1983.  That would 
have been nearly 2 years before the sale to Tenneco.  I don't know if bolt 
manufacturing was going until the shutdown, but it seems likely.  I am not 
aware of IH supplying bolts to other manufacturers but there was likely some 
of of that going on.  IH probably wasn't a price competitive option. :)

Jim Becker

-----Original Message----- 
From: jtchall at nc.rr.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2015 8:08 PM
To: Farmall/IHC mailing list
Subject: Re: [Farmall] ih bolts

Jim, was the WP plant still making bolts until the sale to Tenneco? Also,
did IH ever sell WP bolts to anyone else? I have never seen them on anything
that wasn't IH related. I read on another forum that they did but I have my
doubts.

I recently used some really long 1/4" NOS IH bolts on my corn planter. Hated
to use them seeing they were NOS but since it is an IH planter I figured why
not!

John

-----Original Message----- 
From: Jim Becker
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2015 3:22 PM
To: farmall
Subject: Re: [Farmall] ih bolts

The dot heads were followed by the IH which were followed by the WP.  IH
both made and bought bearings.  I suppose lead time and quantities were
factored into the decisions.  Nearly all bearings are some sort of standard
size, thus would have been available pretty quickly from outside.  Tooling
up for a bearing is relatively expensive, not worth it unless you need a
bunch of them.

Jim Becker

-----Original Message----- 
From: jtchall at nc.rr.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2015 9:11 AM
To: farmall
Subject: [Farmall] ih bolts

I think we discussed this a while back but I can’t find it:
Every true IH collector knows they made their own bolts at the West Pullman
plant. What came first, IH or WP markings on the heads? What years did IH
put these marks on? The bolts with the raised circle (I’m assuming from a
parting operation), did these precede the other 2?

Also, did IH out source some of their bearings? I can see it bing a lot
easier (cost effective) to make your own bolts. Bearings are a different
story.

John Hall

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