Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki
Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki
Advertisement
Main article: Mercedes-Benz

Part of Daimler Trucks, Mercedes-Benz trucks is one of the world's largest manufacturer of trucks under various brands. Trucks have been built under the Freightliner, Master Motors, Mercedes-Benz, Mitsubishi Fuso, Sterling (discontinued) and Western Star brands.

Daimler trucks were first produced in 1886.

Currently trucks are produced in Argentina, Brazil, Germany and South Africa. A joint venture with Kamaz is underway and will soon be producing trucks, and a new plant is under construction in India, formerly a joint venture with Hero.

Models[]

The range of Mercedes-Benz trucks consists of: [1]

Mercedes-Benz Arocs 3363 (ABBA Plant hire) at Hillhead 2014 - IMG 5263

Mercedes-Benz Arocs at Hillhead 2014

Mercedes-Benz Arocs 3363 (ABBA Plant hire) at Hillhead 2014 - IMG 5265

Mercedes-Benz Arocs at Hillhead 2014

Mercedes-Benz Arocs 1827 fitted ship loader at Hillhead 2014 - IMG 5268

Mercedes-Benz Arocs at Hillhead 2014

Mercedes-Benz 8x4 chassis - IMG 5264

Mercedes-Benz Arocs at Hillhead 2014

  • Mercedes-Benz Accelo 9 15 C - medium duty
  • Mercedes-Benz Arocs - tractor
  • Mercedes-Benz Atego — (1998-current) light truck from 7 to 16 tonnes
  • Mercedes-Benz Atron — (2013-current) mid-sized truck from 17 to 23 tonnes in rigid and articulated
  • Mercedes-Benz Axor — (2001-current) mid-sized truck from 18 to 26 tonnes in rigid and articulated
  • Mercedes-Benz Actros — (1996-current) heavy duty rigid and premium articulated — 18 to 250 tonnes
  • Mercedes-Benz Atego 2425 - heavy duty
  • Mercedes-Benz Econic — low floor version of the Axor for refuse and specialist applications
  • Mercedes-Benz Unimog — for special purpose applications and transport across extreme terrain
  • Mercedes-Benz Zetros — off-road truck for extreme operations
Specialised models
  • 1828L (F581) Mobile Casualty Treatment Centre
  • 1517L Mobile Casualty Treatment Centre

Older Models[]

  • Mercedes-Benz L-series
    • Mercedes-Benz L 911
    • Mercedes-Benz L 1113
    • Mercedes-Benz L 2624
    • Mercedes-Benz L 312
    • Mercedes-Benz L 608D
    • Mercedes-Benz L 913
    • Mercedes-Benz L 914
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LA/LS 1112
    • Mercedes-Benz L 914
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LK/LA/LAS 1114
    • Mercedes-Benz L / LK 1215
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LK 1218
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LK 1514
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS/LK 1517
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS 1521
    • Mercedes-Benz LA 1419
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS/LK 1518
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS 1526
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LK 1615
    • Mercedes-Benz L 1619
    • Mercedes-Benz L 1620
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS 1622
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS 1633
    • Mercedes-Benz L/LS 1938
    • Mercedes-Benz L 3500
    • Mercedes-Benz L 4500
    • Mercedes-Benz L 5400
    • Mercedes-Benz L 6600
  • Mercedes-Benz LP-Series
  • Mercedes-Benz LP 608 (1965-?)
  • Mercedes-Benz NG-series
    • Mercedes-Benz NG 73 (1973-1992)
    • Mercedes-Benz NG 80 (1980-?)
  • Mercedes-Benz LK-series (1984-?)
    • ? - add models here
  • Mercedes-Benz SK-series
    • Mercedes-Benz SK 3553

See also[]

References / sources[]

  • based on a wikipedia stub

External links[]



Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Mercedes-Benz#Trucks. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


Advertisement