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Peterbilt kicks out the jams to introduce Model 589

Manufacturer replaces oft-customized Model 389, retaining classic styling

Peterbilt introduced the Model 589 replacement for the Model 389 introduced in 2007. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

FORT WORTH, Texas – Peterbilt Motors could have made a bigger spectacle of launching its high-end, low-volume Model 589. But it is hard to imagine how.

A Peterbilt-only Pride & Class Truck Show of more than 200 heritage models. Renting out the cavernous Texas Motor Speedway. A Southern rock concert. More than 3,000 attendees from VIPs to employees to fans off the street.

Then came the truck, continuing a tradition of long-hood, squared-grille beasts with 7-inch vertical chrome exhausts and 15-inch-diameter chrome air cleaners that lend to the distinctiveness of the trucker’s truck.

The history of Peterbilt’s traditional model stretches nearly 70 years to the 1954 debut of the Model 351. It was followed by the 359, 379 and finally the current-generation 389 introduced in 2007.


“Over time, we have had evolutions of our traditional trucks, not revolutions,” Jason Skoog, Peterbilt general manager, said during the Tuesday evening reveal that included a concert by Palestine, Texas-based Whiskey Myers followed by fireworks lighting the night sky above the track’s jumbotron video screen.

Maybe the last of a breed

On Wednesday, Skoog acknowledged the diesel-powered truck favored by customizers could be on its last model.

“If you go back through our history, it’s every 15 to 20 years [that] we redo the traditional Peterbilt truck. So this will carry us at least into the 2040 time frame,” he said. “You can never predict the future, but I would say ‘quite possibly’” it is the last of an era.

Peterbilt General Manager Jason Skoog introduced the new Model 589 at the Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

The Model 589 and a Legendary special edition were a decade in the making, in part because the Paccar Inc. brand had other priorities and partly because Peterbilt needed to secure critical components in dimensions to fit a wider cab while staying within overall width tolerances. Peterbilt has revamped its entire heavy- and medium-duty lineup in recent years. Its oldest current product is the 567 introduced in 2013.


Peterbilt cab conversions

Peterbilt has converted the cab of its heavy-duty Model 367 and Model 379 from 6 feet, 2 inches wide to 6 feet, 9 inches in width. The additional space between the seats also allows a driver to access the sleeper cab without turning or twisting.

It allows the plant to build three trucks on a single platform as well. That saves the company engineering and design time and significant capital expense, Peterbilt Chief Engineer Scott Newhouse said.

All bumper options from the 389 are carried over to the 589 but now come with LED running lights. A V-style visor replaces the 389’s rounded one. Bullet-style marker lights across the top are twice as bright as those on the legacy model.

The 589 also offers the Bendix Wingman Fusion suite of safety system technologies that include forward collision warning and lane departure warning. 

(Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Small sales but devoted fans

Peterbilt has sold about 110,000 Model 389s since their introduction in 2007. Annual production is a fraction of the flagship Model 579 assembled at the nonunion plant in Denton, Texas. The 589 joins the 579 and the 567 at the 43-year-old facility, where 2,500 workers turn out 201 trucks a day on two shifts.

Sibling Kenworth introduced its chrome-laden W990 three years ago as the high-end “reward truck” that fleets assign to their best drivers. Some 589s will go there, but smaller fleets and owner-operators also buy them in tens and hundreds of copies. Overall Peterbilt sells three trucks to larger fleets to one for smaller operations and individual truckers.

The Model 389 goes away at the end of the year. Production of the Model 589 begins in January with the first 589 trucks getting special interior badging and sequential numbering.

(Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Behind the wheel

Two quick spins in the 589 Legendary around the 1.5-mile Texas Motor Speedway track found a well-mannered and extremely quiet cab with a clear view over its long snout. Side mirrors are 2 inches deeper, providing a better rear view. They are expected to get embedded video camera technology already available on the 579.


Speaking in normal tones was easily understood by someone in the sleeper compartment, not the case on many current trucks. Though engine noise was present, little of it seeped into the cab, providing quietness comparable to near-silent battery-electric electric trucks. 

The manual transmission shifted effortlessly, though only about one in four buyers are expected to choose it over the Eaton-Cummins Endurant automated manual transmission. Steering was effortless with a quick-returning wheel even after negotiating one of the track’s turns.

Peterbilt’s Jason Skoog’s math lesson

Peterbilt reveals major redesign of its flagship Class 8 Model 579

Paccar recalls medium-duty trucks for sudden brake failure

Click for more FreightWaves articles by Alan Adler.

5 Comments

  1. Steve Cormier

    Always been a Peterbilt fan and owner but the only problem now is who in the world can afford a new one what’s the price of this beauty gonna be 🤔

  2. Travis Lynch

    Shame on all auto makers for stripping the American dream of making a living and being a prisoner to them to try to make a living to the greedy automakers and trucks of the world. The prices are way to high!!!!🤬 poor logging truckers over the years trying to better them selves to have a newer truck to do their job to the best of their abilities. Think the makers of America would fight back on how expensive it is to live here!

  3. Martin Ipsen

    I’m only 58 years old. I admired the Peterbilt truck for as long as I can recall. I can’t even think of the American future without a rustic looking truck such as the mighty majestic looking Pete rolling down the roadways to impress the next generation of bighearted countryboys and those good ole gals that will keep our country going.
    If these ole trucks exit the roadways completely to allow those automated rigs to dominate our way of life, America will fall to the wayside. Ideas like common courtesy and politeness from whatever corner of this country will fade away. It was a Good ole-boy who was an elderly driver who inspired me to maintain the idea. I also had a few regrets say to me that they also wanted to learn the ways of a truck driver.
    A truck driver isn’t simply a person that moves cargo, he is only a small fraction of Who keeps life going as it does. He’s a go-to kind of master of nothing but a purveyor of everything that we see every moment of any day. You can call me a crazy nut if you will, that’s fine by me. You Mark my words, when the American truck driver ceases to sit behind the wheel of those big rigs, life itself will drain out of America. The American Truck Driver is the Forever “Superman”.
    You ask around, you’ll see for yourself what it is I’m trying to tell ya’all.

    C.B. Handle: Major Malfunction, USMC; Cheyenne, Wyoming

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Alan Adler

Alan Adler is an award-winning journalist who worked for The Associated Press and the Detroit Free Press. He also spent two decades in domestic and international media relations and executive communications with General Motors.