The tank is shown to be hauled on a flatbed trailer hitched to a yellow pickup truck, but when the tank is first being rolled down off the trailer, there is no truck hitched to the trailer.
The tank hits the corner of the patrol car and flips the car out of the way as it blasts on through the roadblock, yet in the shots of Enos and Cletus driving alongside the behemoth, the side of the car is undamaged.
The tank's spiked hub catches one of the patrol car's hubcaps when it pierces the tire, yet when the car rolls over to the side of the road, the hubcap is back on the wheel again.
The delicately-precision U.S. Mint printing plates would not be merely rattling around loose inside a crude lightweight box with long hard-tipped bolt-ends sticking through into the interior on the box, and the lid secured with just a simple padlock. The plates would be stored in a padded close-fitting enclosure and carried inside a frame-anchored safe with a combination lock. And they would have more than a single motorcycle guard and one driver with nobody else also riding in the truck to provide backup security. Even armoured cars that carry cash for banks and stores always have at least two armed men attending them.
No effort made to produce an authentic-looking newspaper page; after the single first paragraph under the "$100 plates on tour" headline, the remainder of the article is totally invalid and unrelated to the headline, and is just a set of vague non-specifcs and rambling-worded paragraphs of meaningless jibber-jabber, and many of the paragraphs are also merely exact "repeats" (duplicates) of each other.
Bo and Luke leave Hazzard County, which is expressly forbidden by the terms of their parole, in order to compete in the NASCAR circuit.