John K
Well-known member
- First Name
- John
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2020
- Threads
- 36
- Messages
- 2,195
- Reaction score
- 918
- Location
- Los Angeles
- Vehicles
- Volt, CT reserve day 2

đź‘‹ Welcome! If you were registered on Cybertruckownersclub.com as of Feb. 23, 2025 or earlier, you can login here with the same username and password as on Cybertruckownersclub.
If you registered on Cybertruckownersclub after Feb. 23, 2025, you can copy your account to here with just 2-clicks via your Account Copy menu.
If you wish, you can remove your account here.
I have been to Wyoming many times. Rolling coal is not the worse they can do to you. The Wyoming EV owners better watch where they drive because there are humongous sized mining trucks there where the mining truck could drive on top of the EV and you would not be able to see the crushed EV under just one of the truck tires.The dozens of Wyoming EV owners are crushed ?
can't fix stupid ..... or bribed.
Thing is... A lot of these huge mining trucks are getting converted to full EV... I wonder what the state's position will be on EV mining equiptment...I have been to Wyoming many times. Rolling coal is not the worse they can do to you. The Wyoming EV owners better watch where they drive because there are humongous sized mining trucks there where the mining truck could drive on top of the EV and you would not be able to see the crushed EV under just one of the truck tires.
Manslaughter isn't very funny. But also those trucks are slow and wouldn't have an easy time catching most EVs. Not to mention they probably don't frequent the same roads.I have been to Wyoming many times. Rolling coal is not the worse they can do to you. The Wyoming EV owners better watch where they drive because there are humongous sized mining trucks there where the mining truck could drive on top of the EV and you would not be able to see the crushed EV under just one of the truck tires.
I'm under the impression that these large trucks are not road-legal, and so are used exclusively on privately-owned mine-roads.Manslaughter isn't very funny. But also those trucks are slow and wouldn't have an easy time catching most EVs. Not to mention they probably don't frequent the same roads.
They aren't the only time a Tesla might come across one of those is if its visiting a mine and is actually allowed in the mine area.I'm under the impression that these large trucks are not road-legal, and so are used exclusively on privately-owned mine-roads.