In the "seen through the windshield" view of Steve's first coming into the outskirts of downtown Konab, Steve's car is shown to not have a rear-view mirror, but just a mounting-button glued to the windshield. Yet in other views of the car, it has a mirror attached to the windshield.
When Steve, Andy, and Frank Gifford are in the field playing football, Andy makes a move and gets past Frank, who is sitting on the ground. The scene cuts to Steve laughing and then back to Frank, who now has black cow directly behind him that wasn't there in the previous shot.
When Andy and Steve are at the shoe store Andy is wearing dark colored shoes. After Andy destroys the blue running shoe with with stripes he is seen wearing those exact same shoes in the next shot despite the salesman saying they were the last pair.
When Andy and Steve are at the shoe store Andy is wearing dark colored shoes. After Andy destroys the blue running shoe with white stripes he is seen wearing those exact same shoes in the next shot despite the salesman saying they were the last pair.
The scrap of sheet-metal that Steve tears out from the truck's floorboard is still solid and intact, even though it is somewhat rusted on the surface. So it would not crumble into brown rusty powder when Steve crushes it in his bionic hand.
In the closeup shot of the newspaper clipping that the boy is reading, the text of the article has nothing to do with the headline.
In both of the closeup shots of the newspaper clippings that the boy is reading, the identical unrelated article of irrelevant rambling text is printed.
When Andy tackles the runner causing him to fumble the ball possession is given to Andys ream. However the runner was down when he lost control of the ball. His knees had already made contact with the ground. As a result this would not have been ruled as a fumble and a turnover but instead just a down. The opponent's would have retained possession of the ball.
When Steve is repairing the coral fence and jumping on top of the shed he is wearing rubber soled shoes, but when he's done and walks up to Andy and his sister he is wearing cowboy boots.
When Andy jams the break pedal through the floor board to avoid hitting Vernon he only pushes the break pedal. The pickup truck has a manual transmission and would require him to depress the break and the clutch simultaneously in order to stop without stalling the motor.
Andy is dancing with Judy, yet Judy is also clearly shown standing in the audience more than once, wearing the same distinctive blue dress.
After Andy is looking at the newspaper articles, his sister knocks, so he puts them back in the book and puts the book under his thighs. He clearly moves his legs, which would not be the case if paralyzed.
The newspaper headline reads, "Kanab Boy Made Bionic", yet none of the articles on the front page have anything to do with Andy.
In episodes such as this, Steve's story line is constantly being reset in stating that no one but him understands the emotional pressures of being bionic. However, Steve should remember that he helped at least two other individuals cope with their new bionic implants. The first was Barney Miller in "The Seven Million Dollar Man," The next was Jamie Sommers in the two part story "The Bionic Woman." Also, Steve has fought the bionic alien Sasquatch in more than one episode.
Andy has been in a wheelchair for 4 years but both the front and back door of his house is shown to have no wheelchair ramp or any other kind of handicap access.
Andy had only seen Steve perform bionically just the one time before he first asks him about his bionic limbs, so presumably Andy would have no way of knowing that just Steve's right arm was bionic, and not both arms.