“International” can mean very different things depending on the machine—International Harvester tractor families, International-branded Cub/Lo-Boy lines, and occasionally listings that sit nearby because the underlying platform or naming overlaps. This page is most useful when you treat each listing as a coverage label (family + year band + document type), not as a single brand umbrella.
International-labeled manuals are often grouped by families and production windows. A good match usually comes from combining:
Look for compact markers embedded in titles and previews—series strings, short document IDs, and labels like shop manual, operator’s manual, or parts catalog. You’ll also see multi-model groupings (several tractor numbers on one line), which is usually the page telling you: “this document is family-scoped, not single-tractor scoped.”
International inventory here isn’t one uniform format. Some files behave like shop/workshop references for a defined tractor series, while others emphasize operation & maintenance coverage, and some are clearly parts/diagram catalogs that prioritize assemblies and identification pages (when included). That mix is helpful if you pick by intent: family-wide system reference vs. operator-focused coverage vs. component identification.
When two titles share overlapping model numbers, the safest separators are usually:
Series-bundled International Harvester tractor shop manuals (such as the 454/464/484/574/584/674 family), Cub/Lo-Boy coverage (154/184/185), Hydro-series tractor manuals (Hydro 100 / Hydro 186 and related models), and occasional adjacent equipment items like an IHI parts catalog or Case IH engine-focused workshop coverage.
If your machine’s badge says “International” but your model naming doesn’t appear verbatim, prioritize the closest family grouping + year span you can verify—those two signals tend to align the manual’s scope more reliably than the brand label alone.