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With two years go to before Fisker commences deliveries of the all-electric Ocean crossover, we’re in for many months of piecemeal updates. The fledgling California automaker has released another smattering of details after debuting the Ocean at this month’s Consumer Electronics Show, helping to fill in some functional aspects. At 182.7 inches long, 76 inches wide, and 63.6 inches high, the Fisker is 0.6 inches taller than the Ford Mustang Mach-E, 3.3 inches shorter, and two inches wider. The dimensions translate into 25 cubic feet of cargo room with the rear seats up and the parcel shelf installed, 25 cu. ft. without the parcel shelf, and 45 cu. ft. with the shelf out and rear seats down. At the other end of the interior, the instrument cluster is 9.8 inches, and the infotainment screen is a 16-inch vertically-oriented unit with haptic feedback.
In between, designers did their best to source eco-friendly materials to create a “vegan interior.” The Dinamica seating surfaces are derived from old T-shirts, polyester fibers, and recycled plastic, with reinforced rayon backing. The carpet comes from recycled nylon taken from discarded fishing gear. Fisker also says it will recycle rubber waste created during the Ocean’s production.
The standard wheels come in 20-inch sizes, with 22-inchers on the options sheet. Roof rails and a tow hitch will be options, too, but we’ll need to wait another year to find out towing capacity.
Turns out the announced entry price for $37,499 is for a base model that doesn’t benefit from all-wheel drive, meaning it also doesn’t get the more-than-300-horsepower powertrain. When we covered the reveal, we wrote, “Fisker quoted between 250 and 300 miles of driving range depending on driving conditions,” so it’s possible the base model notches 300 miles while the AWD version comes in closer to 250 miles. The Ocean gets an 80-kWh battery pack. For comparison, there’s a 20-mile range delta between RWD and AWD versions of the Mach-E with the Standard Range 75.7-kWh battery pack. A high-performance Ocean will get a larger pack, targeting acceleration to 60 miles per hour in under three seconds, a fair chunk faster than the 3.5-second sprint for the Tesla Model Y Performance. Details on that model won’t come until 2021.
At some point this year, tire kickers will be able to explore the Ocean in person at Fisker experience centers, and set up test drives through a mobile app due next year. On top of the customer-friendly lease deal that includes free maintenance, Fisker says it will run a concierge service for servicing, picking up the crossover from owners and returning it any time maintenance is needed.
That’s all we know for now. The next tranche of details and specs will come during the Geneva Motor Show in March.
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