Paul;
The 932 would have a fixed tread and usually smaller tires. These were common in cereal crop growing areas. Your 931 will have adjustable tread front and rear to match row width in the corn and row crop growing areas. Your 931 will have longer front spindles for more crop clearance and will set higher than Ralph's 932.
Many 932's were sold without 3 point hitch or PTO, while almost all 931's were equipped with 3 point and PTO.
Gene
Gene, thanks for clearing up the numbering system for me. I do recall now that the second digit
referred to the fuel, as in 742 was the gas engine. Mine was just a 732 with the standard dual
range drive.
But you say 932s had smaller rubber? Mine had the 10x16 rubber up front which was pretty big
back then. Most earlier 932s had the skinny 7.50x18 front tires. Mine also had the tubular front
axle unlike 99% if all the other older 930s I've seen. Pto was pretty much standard equipment
here but I have only seen one 932 with 3 point and that was a "GP" model that was rare here.j
It had the small rear fenders, reversed front axle too.
Pretty well every 930-932 I've ever seen here had 18.4x34 rear rubber although I did once see
an old round fender model with the 23.1x26 tires, sure looked different. They needed a little
more rubber on the ground although I got by with 18.4x34 singles. A neighbour dualed up his old
six speed 930 but I think he had rear axle breakages as a result.
I took this photo in fall of 76 when I brought the 930 home and parked it beside the old 730
before delivering it to the dealer where we had traded it. Shows the differences, between the
two. They sure set high and forward on the 930. Check out the massive wheel weights. A previous
owner had installed them off some old Massey I believe.