
TKS-90, TKS-75, and TK-90 were delivered to the Volga Combine Plant from India.
By Priya Singh
TKS-90, TKS-75, and TK-90 were delivered to the Volga Combine Plant from India.

India delivered the first batch of small and medium-power tractor prototypes to Russia's Volga Combine Plant. The delivery of these tractors has signalled the beginning of a new sector of cooperation between Russia and India.
TKS-90, TKS-75, and TK-90 were delivered to the Volga Combine Plant from India. TKS 90 is a tractor used for horticulture. It is narrower and allows you to drive between tree rows. The Federal Ministry of Agriculture even requested such machines from Russia's Ministry of Industry and Trade.
These are wheeled tractors with engines ranging in horsepower from 40 to 90. The company is currently undergoing a thorough inspection. The machine must be "run in" at the factory before it can be used.
Ivan Ilyin, head of the Volga Combine Plant's workshop for assembling wheels and tractors, stated, "4-5 moto-hours should be spent on testing. We run everything, including the front and rear axles. We're checking everything. The first impression is very good - very convenient, everything has been done for the machine operator's convenience, and there is climate control. In comparison to others, this tractor is small, compact, and powerful ".
These tractors are a trial batch that has arrived in order to be distributed across the Russian Federation to various climatic zones in order to determine what other requirements Moscow should ask its Indian partners to consider when localizing these tractors in Russia.
Indian partners include ITL, one of the world's largest tractor plants, which produces over 100,000 machines per year and exports its products to 140 countries worldwide.
The Indian company has already organized similar assembly plants in Algeria, Brazil, and Turkey. And it will now be in Russia.
Small and medium-power wheeled tractors will be assembled in Cheboksary this spring using their full-cycle production technology based on the Volga Combine Plant. At least 3,000 cars must be produced here each year. Thus, by 2033, Cheboksary should produce approximately 80% of these tractors.
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