22 Weird Facts About Snowman’s 1974 Kenworth W900 (Smokey and the Bandit)

Timeworn lengends November 5, 2025
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Dive into the world of trucking legend with Snowman’s 1974 Kenworth W900A from Smokey and the Bandit. This wasn’t just a background vehicle — it was a real, working Class 8 rig that carried the movie’s story across the highways. Painted in deep coffee brown with gold pinstripes, it looked black on camera, giving it that menacing outlaw vibe everyone remembers. The film actually used three different W900A trucks — two from 1974 and one 1973 anniversary edition — to handle all the stunts, crashes, and close-up shots. Its long hood, sleeper cab, and tall chrome exhaust stacks made it a visual powerhouse on screen, outshining even Bandit’s flashy Trans Am. Unlike many movie props, Snowman’s Kenworth had real diesel engines under the hood and a fully functional sleeper cab, proving it was built for real long-haul work, not just Hollywood show. The trailer it hauled was just as iconic, featuring a painted mural of a stagecoach chase — a perfect symbol of outlaws on the run. Fun fact: the refrigeration unit on the front was fake! It looked legit for the movie but didn’t work at all. Today, the original trucks are lost, but the legend of Snowman’s W900A lives on through fan-built replicas and truck shows across America. It remains a symbol of freedom, rebellion, and the hardworking spirit of real truckers. This rig didn’t just move freight — it moved a generation of movie fans and defined an era of 1970s trucking culture.

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