Do you need to be reminded about Knight Rider? Probably not, but it can’t hurt, right? Here you go:
The first fact feels like one of those ideas you’d have that seems so obvious, but you also half expect that there’s likely a reason why you could never actually do it. Like the old cliché about making the whole airplane out of whatever the black box flight recorder is made from: doing so would be far too heavy and expensive, and you know the deal. So, when it comes to having your hero car bash into other cars every episode and yet you somehow need it to not look like a beer can on the floor after a frat party, could you just, you know, make a huge rubber shell to cover the whole car and protect it? Turns out, you can, and that’s exactly what the prop people on Knight Rider Did:
The rubber shell seems to have been part of the production plan from the very start, showing up in a pre-pilot video used to sell the show in the first place. If you have a slight masochistic streak and regularly watch old episodes of Knight Rider, you can spot when KITT is wearing the rubber shell by looking at the A-pillars:
The tell-tale for the early episodes with the shell is that, because it’s a thick rubber shell that fits over the car, things like the glass of the windshield will appear more recessed. Overall, they did an excellent job making a rubber mold of the car for the shell, though soon after the show went on the air the Trans Am front end was updated, so the rubber shell just had its face lopped off, and that was that. You can see this shell far more obviously as a result:
Of course, in the era of CRT, low-definition televisions and lots of motion and explosions, most people would never notice watching the show. It’s only in our modern era of being able to grab high quality freeze-frames that the inherent crappiness is apparent. That’s not really fair of me to say, though; the shell was an impressive bit of prop-making, and while it’s not clear exactly who made the shell, but it’s possible it was either made internally, or, as the video speculates, by none other than car customizing legend George Barris.
In addition to protecting KITT from getting all dinged up, the rubber shells made also served another purpose: they formed the entire body of what is now my favorite version of KITT, the one used for the really damaging or dangerous jumps and other potentially destructive stunts. The one the production team called the Flivver, which was essentially a VW Beetle-based sand rail.
When it came to doing stunts that demanded KITT really catch some air or crash hard into or onto something, the team needed something more rugged, lighter, and, especially, cheaper than the Trans Ams they used for KITT. They couldn’t just replace Trans Ams or Trans Am parts like candy, after all. But, in Southern California in the 1980s, there was a rugged, very adaptable and wildly cheap and available car that would work: the Volkswagen Beetle.
Beetles had been converted into dune buggies and sand rails for years, and were great at doing jumps and landing and generally taking all sorts of abuse. If something broke, VW parts were plentiful and cheap. So, the production team built what is essentially a tube-framed VW sand rail:
…but designed to fit the dimensions of a Pontiac Trans Am, and especially one of the rubber bodies the team had already made for the rubber protective shell for KITT. Look at all that empty front overhang! You can also see the tell-tale VW double torsion-beam front axle there, and the normal air-cooled VW engine is out back there, with what appears to be some kind of periscope-looking air intake sticking up. I’m not sure how I’ve managed to live anything approximating a fulfilling life before I knew these details about KITT and Knight Rider. Man, I loved this show and Airwolf as some others have mentioned. Its funny to me how the two are somehow linked in other people’s brain besides mine. Thinking of one, always elicits memories of the other for me. My favorite bit of Knight Rider lore is how they filmed the scenes of KITT driving itself. You’d see KITT speed into frame when Michael summoned him on his watch (see my avatar) and as a kid, I always wondered how they did that. Turns out they used the most wonderfully low-tech possible solution – a stunt driver…wearing a Pontiac Firebird seat cover and a tan long-sleeve shirt! You can sometimes catch a glimpse if you look reallllly closely just as the car comes to a screening halt but before they switch to footage of an empty seat. Yeah, watching old childhood favorites on modern TVs has ruined a lot of the magic for me. I re-watched Airwolf a few years back. On the old CRT, the rockets just looked like orange blobs flying through the sky. On a modern HD TV, I could tell that the FX team drew them in not as blobs but in a rocket shape. Man, was that a sad day. Also, we all know KITT had a molecular bonded shell, not rubber! While the series as a whole was a by the numbers “Mystery of the week”, the pilot is very good IMHO. I’m surprised Torch didn’t comment on all the potential Frunk space. And one last thing, is that what Torch unleashed looks like while David is gone? I expected a TRS-80 or C=64 theme to overtake the Autopian during this time. Maybe some Atari 2600 graphics depicting a space invaders clone where David destroys rusting Valiants. I mean, is an 18 wheeler with some rockets, driven by Hasselhoff with a goatee really that scary of an opponent? Even if there were not a lot of folks involved in Knight Ridder who were ever worked on Dukes, folks in the industry had to know how they were just blowing thru absurd numbers of cars on that show. To me, it enhances his cornball coolness somehow, say compared to Paul Michael Glaser who did nothing but constantly complain about Starsky’s Gran Torino, only to eventually embrace it later in life when he kinda had no choice. https://jalopnik.com/the-wild-pontiac-tojan-was-the-f-body-supercar-made-to-1833344639