![]() ![]() There were different options available depending on what a person needed to do with these rigs. The story goes that Carl Heald was tapped to create a new market for the Heath company which was famous for mail order radio kits. They wanted in on the burgeoning minibike market. Heald came up with a couple of models for the Heath company but it wasn’t long before they decided to get out of that business and concentrate on their radios. They made two, three, and four-wheel power equipment and reportedly the kits were so well documented that they only had one person on their help line and they weren’t even that busy. The company was run into the ground in 1988 by a new owner’s group. The seller says that this Hauler “has always been kept inside and has the Briggs 16hp engine, forward/reverse, electric start, and a new coil pack. It has lights and horn, they are not hooked up but they do work.” There are still parts available and according to Mr. ![]() Have any of you heard of a Heald Hauler? How about Heath kit radios? Heald, the frames were all painted “International Harvester Red”. I understand your attraction to this particular machine, but then our taste in the interesting and unusual are pretty much the same. ![]()
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