Bill - there are plenty of Euro bandsaws in the 30 - 36" class. Partly because they were better at exporting than many US companies. Their saws often went to where big timber existed in Africa, Australia, and SA. Or to our American west. Maybe you didn't realize all that Stenner equipment (resaws, and saw band maintenance machinery) is Euro?
That aside, "narrow band" tilt table variety saws like the one posted by the OP went everywhere because they are used for sawing and resawing in cabinet and millwork shops. Originally large wheels were better due to less well developed steel for blades - it is just less likely to break on larger radius bends. After maybe the 19teens, it was about capacity to the back column for large worpieces, and the fact that a longer band lasts longer and cuts more freely (more time to dump the sawdust) than a short little band in a small saw.
I don't recognize the OP saw. it strikes me as middle European (like Czek/Poland/etc) or maybe an asian copy of a Euro saw. The table looks to be formed sheet metal?
Will be interested to hear a positive ID.
smt