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A Tesla Cybertruck Owner Says Kids at his Son’s Baseball Practice Laughed at his Cybertruck After it was Towed – Adds, “28 kids Went From Thinking the Cybertruck Was Cool to Pointing & Laughing”

A Cybertruck owner says that the 10-year-old kids at his son’s baseball practice initially thought the Cybertruck was the coolest vehicle. However, their excitement faded & they started to point & laugh after the Cybertruck had to be towed on a flatbed.
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Author: Tinsae Aregay
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Ernest S. Harbaugh, a Cybertruck owner from Ohio, states that 28 children laughed at his Cybertruck after a minor problem resulted in it being towed on a flatbed.

Ernest says the children were initially cheering the Cybertruck, but their enthusiasm turned to skepticism when the truck experienced an issue that rendered it undrivable.

The issue began when Ernest drove his 10-year-old son to a baseball match in his Cybertruck.

Ernest placed his son’s baseball gear in the front trunk (frunk); however, when they arrived at the field, the frunk wouldn’t open.

This is quite frustrating; however, the Cybertruck owner and father stated he was prepared to drive 40 minutes back home to fetch a replacement glove for his son.

Regrettably, despite his willingness to make this sacrifice to support his child, Ernest states that the Cybertruck detected an issue with the frunk and went into “Limp Mode.”

This is where the truck limits the top speed to 15 miles per hour, meaning that, besides repositioning the vehicle to be towed, there is nothing the owner can do.

At this point, Ernest says he was so frustrated that he briefly considered tying a rope around the frunk, connecting it to a tree, and yanking the frunk open.

The frustrated Cybertruck owner shared his story on the Tesla Cybertruck Owners group on Facebook.

He writes…

“Emergency, frunk won’t open!!!

Is there a way to manually open it???

Just about ready to loop a strap through the top corners and tie it to a tree, then back up and rip it off WhistlinDiesel style.

So pissed! My son’s baseball bag was in there, and the freaking latch decided to allow an inch or two of up-and-down movement but not actually unlatch.

I was going to make the 39-minute drive to get another glove back at the house, only to find that despite the frunk not being able to open, the truck was aware it was not fully closed and retracted.

So, while I had problems driving to the game, I was now only allowed a maximum speed of 15MPH.

Tesla service did end up getting in touch with me. After all the screen resets and power shutdown cycles, it was sent to the service center on a flatbed. I was stuck with a $50 Uber bill, and 28 ten-year-old kids went from thinking the Cybertruck was the coolest vehicle to pointing and laughing as it was towed away on a flatbed truck.”

This is definitely not ideal, and below his post, Ernest included a picture of his Cybertruck loaded onto a flatbed and next to a baseball field.

A Tesla Cybertruck Owner Says Kids at his Son’s Baseball Practice Laughed at his Cybertruck After it was Towed – Adds, “28 kids Went From Thinking the Cybertruck Was Cool to Pointing & Laughing”

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It’s an unusual contrast when you consider how differently some kids view the Cybertruck. In a completely unexpected twist from another Cybertruck story, one owner recently returned to his truck to find a handwritten note from an 8-year-old who was having a birthday party nearby. The boy said he loved the Cybertruck and wanted it to be part of his big day. It's a reminder that, for every group of laughing little leaguers, there's another group of young fans who see the Cybertruck as something futuristic and cool.

Looking at the comments, fellow Cybertruck owners offered suggestions on how Ernest might be able to unlock his frunk.

A fellow Cybertruck owner, Ron Shaw, writes…

“Use the physical button in front of the bumper!!!! That bypasses the Bluetooth controls.”

Another Cybertruck owner, Addam Kuzman, asks…

“Have you tried the app, touch screen, and push button?”

A third Cybertruck owner, Joshua Shea, suggests hooking up a 9-volt battery to open the frunk.

These are all good recommendations for a general issue with the frunk; they are especially useful if the Cybertruck is dead and the owner wants to open the frunk.

If a Cybertruck completely turns off, you can use the 48-volt battery to jump-start the vehicle.

However, the problem is that the jump-start leads for the low-voltage system are located under the Cybertruck frunk.

In this case, as Joshua pointed out, you can connect a 9-volt battery to open the frunk automatically.

However, in Ernest's case, the reason the Cyberturck’s frunk is not opening is not due to a lack of power; rather, it is because of an issue with the latch mechanism.

In this instance, the next course of action is to tow the truck to the nearest Tesla service center for a closer inspection.

What makes experiences like Ernest’s even more compelling is how they contrast with the generally smooth—yet still occasionally unexpected—challenges of owning other Tesla models. While some owners are contending with unusual mechanical quirks like a frunk that won’t open or a vehicle that suddenly enters limp mode, others are discovering that the costs of electric vehicle ownership can creep up in less visible ways. For instance, one Tesla Model Y owner reported a surprising 134% jump in their Edison electricity bill—even though they only charged after 11 p.m. Here’s what happened during their first month with a Model Y, and why it might give potential EV buyers something else to think about beyond just range and features.

Regrettably, as Ernest points out, seeing the Cybertruck loaded onto a flatbed made the kids, who were excited about the Cybertruck, point and laugh at the all-electric truck.

Please let me know what you think in the comments. Share your ideas by clicking the RED “Add new comment” button below. Also, be sure to visit our site, torquenews.com/Tesla, regularly for the latest updates.

Image 1: Screenshot from Abstract Ocean YouTube Channel

Image 2: Screenshot from Ernest S. Harbaugh’s Facebook post, reposted under the fair use copyright rule.

For more information, check out: Several Cybertruck Owners are Reporting That State Farm Insurance is Punishing Them for Driving a Tesla – They Add, “We’re Getting Significant Discounts for Our Gas Cars but Not for Our Teslas”

Tinsae Aregay has been following Tesla and the evolution of the EV space daily for several years. He covers everything about Tesla, from the cars to Elon Musk, the energy business, and autonomy. Follow Tinsae on Twitter at @TinsaeAregay for daily Tesla news.

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Comments

Buzz Wired (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 3:19AM

As the warranties expire, you're going to see these silly vehicles piling up in junkyard. And then what, right?

Samantha (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 4:11AM

~sings to the old Spiderman jingle~

Cybertruck, cybertruck, always driven by a stupid f***. Look here, there it goes. Off on the flatbed woes.... Lookout, this truck really blows.


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Chappy Dee (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 4:28AM

Sounds silly and suspect. The same thing happens if tye vehicle isn't charged adequately.

Much more going on here it would seem...

turnkit (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 4:28AM

Today’s “news” media doesn’t even pretend to be unbiased when they run headlines like this.

“Kids Laugh at Tesla Dad”

Then barely even entertain the faux impartiality with dumb questions of “is it justified?”

These guys hate Musk and Tesla so much they invent stories of how uncool you’ll be if you buy their product - so uncool that even kids will laugh.

This sort of journalism deserves the low wage and end of the news industry era that it has sown.

Chappy Dee (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 4:30AM

Sounds silly and suspect. The same thing happens if tye vehicle isn't charged adequately.

Much more going on here it would seem...

Constance Steinhoff (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 5:01AM

Why are children laughing even part of the story, as well as some children not laughing at cyber trucks. What the heck? Who cares?

You knew what … (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 5:10AM

Of course think it's cool. Like seeing a car crash, like seeing a freight train for the first time, like seeing a clown at a birthday party, like seeing Megatron at Disney. Cool. That does not mean that one single kid would have thought it would be cool to be seen in, cool to keep or want. It's cool as a novelty like 45 years ago as a kid it was cool to see a Delorean but knew that person was just a rich twat and didn't think that person was cool.

EhCanadian (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 5:54AM

Grown man's feelings hurt by 10 year old boys!

He seems exactly like the kind of insecure men I suspect are buying this vehicle.

Ju Do (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 7:04AM

What else can you expect from Elon?
Even 10yr olds know. But keep kissing elonsRearClaiming he is a genius and S.
Now every time you see a Tesla on the road - CLOWNS are in the driver's seat.

Daniella M Garcia (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 7:10AM

You got a c truck for attention-you got negative attention, now you are here to get positive attention. Dude it is the ugliest thing ever made. Elon is a tool over compensated and unfortunately... if you own one you own that assessment too.

Mona (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 7:35AM

Who cares.
I laugh at those in disgust every time I see one.
The ugliest thing I have ever seen pretend to be a vehicle of any kind. Let alone a truck ?? Nah.
😂

Moe Smith (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 7:47AM

The Cybertruck is NOTHING BUT self-inflated ego on wheels. the very existence of this article epitomizes that elementary fact.

Joseph (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 8:12AM

They are garbage! Buy a real truck any of them and you will never have a problem like this. There are so many issues that can happen with any EV vehicle. They are just not perfected and probably never will be, because a new and better technology will be coming soon to replace it.

Laney (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 8:18AM

The cyber truck looks like a piece of crap and the only reason you guys drive it around so you can Let people know you have money.
Nobody really cares

Natasha (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 8:54AM

Who the hell cares what a bunch of 10 year old kids think! Their feet can't even reach a car's pedals! What the hell!

Anti-Nazi Jim (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 8:56AM

Unfortunate the kids weren't laughing from the start. Tesla have the lowest quality of any vehicle on the road, and the Cybertruck is their worst vehicle yet. Doesn't help that the Nazi that runs the company doesn't let the engineers he hired actually do their jobs. These vehicles are death traps.

Dirk Rock (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 8:58AM

HA! If you can afford a Cybertruck, you can afford a $50 Uber ride.Vehicles rushed into production with this sort of technology are going to experience issues. {eopale expect them to be some sort of appliance. Vehicles are a bit more complicated... plus the CEO of the company is a douche.

Doug (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 9:06AM

Buying a cybertruck only proves that one has more money than common sense.
Just like buying any high end car, it's a status symbol for someone that needs their ego stroked.

Jeff King (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 9:07AM

The most embarrassing thing is for the kid whose father actually bought a Cyber truck in the first place. Just say no to__________

Critical Thinker (not verified)    May 11, 2025 - 9:14AM

Why is a car getting towed even news? You might want to ask yourself why they took the time to even write this piece. I would say 10k cars got towed in America on that day.