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21 Replies
- colliehaulerExplorer IIIAround here everyone refereed to them as a old "binder", have no idea why.
- philhExplorer IIIWere they within towing and cargo capacity?
- gboppExplorerfj12ryder wrote: JRscooby wrote: Yep, I have several friends, my age and older, and they all refer, or referred, to IH as "Binders". Which I always assumed was meant as another name for a "reaper" or "binder".
 I bought a brand new '72. I, even back then, knew how to use a screwdriver to aim the headlights.
 The term "corn binder" had nothing to do with headlight aim, but was related to the fact "International Harvester" was mainly a agriculture equipment company.
 We always called them Corn Binders. I had a 71 Travelall years ago. It was a tank.
 Aiming your headlights high to drive through corn and hay fields at night to feed the stock? I never heard that one.
- Deb_and_Ed_MExplorer IIEd and I just drove west on parts of old Route 66, following the route his newly-married father took right after WWII, pulling a travel trailer from Michigan to California so he could learn about working with "plastics". That must have been one long trek....
- fj12ryderExplorer IIIJRscooby wrote: Yep, I have several friends, my age and older, and they all refer, or referred, to IH as "Binders". Which I always assumed was meant as another name for a "reaper" or "binder".
 I bought a brand new '72. I, even back then, knew how to use a screwdriver to aim the headlights.
 The term "corn binder" had nothing to do with headlight aim, but was related to the fact "International Harvester" was mainly a agriculture equipment company.
- FizzExplorerThat drive looks like it could really scramble your eggs.
- colliehaulerExplorer IIILooks like the third one back is a late 50's Dodge. Can't make out what the 4th and 5th ones are.
- JRscoobyExplorer III bought a brand new '72. I, even back then, knew how to use a screwdriver to aim the headlights.
 The term "corn binder" had nothing to do with headlight aim, but was related to the fact "International Harvester" was mainly a agriculture equipment company.
- NaioExplorer III had a '62 corn binder! I loved that truck so much.
- wanderingbobExplorer IIWe called those International trucks , " corn binders '. Headlights were always aimed high so a could see over the corn and hay while drivin out to feed the stock , My last one was a 1962 or 1963 .
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