Fisker has brought the new Ocean EV to the L.A. Auto Show, with a public preview at Manhattan Beach and a presence at the show itself. You can watch the public show reveal above, and see more shots from the show floor below.

Fisker says the Ocean will start at $37,499 before incentives. That entry model would be the Sport trim with a single, 275-horsepower motor driving the front wheels and 250 miles of estimated range. It also has a 0-60 time of 6.9 seconds.

Moving up to the Ultra version at $49,999 gets dual-motor all-wheel drive, 540 hp, 340 miles of range and a 0-60 time of 3.9 seconds. The $68,999 Extreme trim gets AWD, 550 hp, 350+ miles of driving range and a 3.6-second 0-60 sprint.

Fisker also touted the previously announced lease program where customers can choose the length of the lease with a monthly price as low as $379 a month. The lease fleet would be in service for twelve years before being completely recycled by Fisker.

The electric ute will feature eco-friendly materials (recycled fishing nets and T-shirts, for instance), a solar roof that can open in a “California Mode,” a multi-link rear suspension to help bolster its sporting chops and an aerodynamic system that aims to balance minimizing drag with optimized cooling. We’ve also already seen a ‘Force E’ package that would turn the Ocean into a more rugged off-roader for interested fleets.

Today, Fisker also showed the Ocean’s rotating infotainment screen, which can be oriented in portrait or landscape mode.

At a sneak preview near the company HQ in Manhattan Beach, Henrik Fisker said the company logo is inspired by an ocean sunset. “That’s where the orange and blue come from,” he said, “with the two vertical lines symbolizing thee designer’s pencil and the engineer’s ruler — the tools of our trade. My inspiration for the logo happened on a day very much like this one.”

The new affordable EV crossover is scheduled to begin production a year from today at Magna-Steyr’s Graz, Austria factory, though Henrik Fisker said the company is moving fast and could possibly deliver units before then.

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Source: www.autoblog.com