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At 2 47 AM on November 14th 1927 a modified Dodge Brothers truck hit 70 mph on a dirt road outside Detroit loaded with 300 gallons of Canadian whiskey and running from federal agents. This is the untold story of Prohibition's greatest truck modification arms race where bootleggers turned commercial vehicles into high speed smuggling machines that would change American trucking forever. WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER The secret world of 1920s bootlegger truck modifications from doubled horsepower engines to smoke screen systems borrowed from WWI destroyer tactics. See how mechanics transformed innocent Dodge Brothers Screen Sides and REO Speed Wagons into 80 plus mph monsters that outran anything law enforcement could field. FEATURED TRUCKS 1925 Dodge Brothers Screen Side 24hp to 60hp modified 1927 REO Speed Wagon with Duesenberg straight eight 88hp 1926 Chevrolet Superior Federal pursuit 27hp Modified Chrysler Imperials Federal pursuit units KEY LOCATIONS Detroit Windsor smuggling corridor Newark bootlegger garages Michigan back roads where millions of gallons moved during 1920s Prohibition. LEGACY Bootlegger mechanics innovations reinforced frames suspension upgrades power modifications directly influenced commercial trucking. By the 1940s former bootlegger mechanics consulted for Chevrolet and Dodge bringing underground engineering knowledge into factory production. MUSEUM ARTIFACT Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn houses an authentic 1926 Dodge Brothers bootlegger truck with hidden compartments and 287000 miles most run at night with feds in pursuit. TECHNICAL SPECS Engine mods cylinder boring racing pistons carburetor upgrades compression 4 to 1 to 7 to 1 Chassis steel channel iron tripled leaf springs reinforced frames Speed 35 mph factory to 80 to 90 mph modified Cargo 300 plus gallon whiskey loads 1 plus ton KEY FIGURES Tommy Chen Detroit driver Frank Wrench Morrison Newark builder Big Bill Dwyer operation leader Detroit federal task force agents ABOUT TRUCK BUFF USA Documenting the trucks that moved America from bootlegger hot rods to modern highway haulers. Preserving technical knowledge historical context and human stories behind American trucking heritage. CONTEXT 1920 1933 Volstead Act created 3 billion dollar illegal alcohol industry. Single runs netted 5000 dollars a federal agent's annual salary funding underground truck modifications that tested suspension power delivery and chassis dynamics decades ahead of mainstream trucking. COMMUNITY Comment where you're watching from and share family stories of Prohibition era trucking or bootlegger legends from your hometown. SUBSCRIBE Weekly documentaries on American trucking history vintage vehicles and the drivers who shaped transportation. From Prohibition to WWII to modern long haul we cover it all. #ProhibitionTrucks #1920sBootleggers #VintageTrucks #TruckHistory #DodgeBrothers #AmericanTrucking #ProhibitionEra #TruckModification #SmugglersVsCops #ClassicTrucks #TruckingHistory #REOSpeedWagon #AutomotiveHistory #CommercialVehicles #TruckBuffUSA