The First Customer-Spec Fisker Ocean Has Been Delivered Thanks To The Benefits Of Contract Manufacturing

Fisker Ocean Topshot
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It’s official: Fisker has delivered the first Ocean crossover to a customer in Denmark. The marque’s first entry into the EV crossover marketplace is yet to be certified for American sales, but it’s good to go in Europe. As such, another EV startup has completed the rare leap from concept to reality without getting bogged down in the vaporware quagmire. For some, this takes a decade. For Fisker, only seven years.

Fisker Ocean 1

So how did Fisker do it so quickly? Well, experience helps. Henrik Fisker styled the BMW Z8 and helped style the Aston Martin DB9, two of the coolest cars of the 2000s. Fisker then went into coachbuilding before launching Fisker Automotive, the company that made the Karma. While Fisker Automotive never worked out, all of the lessons learned over decades in the automotive industry combined with changing tides of propulsion mean that Fisker, Inc. just might.

In addition, Fisker stacked the deck by taking in-house production out of the equation, a move we’re likely to see more of from various EV startups in the future. Just like how Apple doesn’t actually make your iPhone, many EV startups won’t actually make their own cars. They’ll do the engineering and design, but the assembly will be handed off to a contract manufacturer like Magna, the company that’s building the Ocean.

Fisker Ocean Interior

Magna was a smart bet, given its very established track record building cars for other people. The Mercedes-Benz G-Class is built by Magna, as is the Toyota GR Supra, and the Jaguar I-Pace. Magna Steyr also built the original BMW X3, the Peugeot RCZ, and the Pinzgauer. Exactly the sort of robust track record you’d want when choosing a contract manufacturer.

What’s more, Fisker doesn’t even use its own platform for the Ocean. It’s built on an existing Magna platform, powered by batteries from CATL. Again, none of these are bad things as they’re all made by established players which means Fisker could speed up its engineering process. The asset-light approach lets Fisker keep things moving without sinking huge sums into manufacturing, since actually building cars has proven to be a stumbling block for EV startup after EV startup.

Fisker Ocean 2

Of equal importance is Fisker’s approach. Instead of showing off a future model years in advance (hello, Tesla), it unveiled the Ocean at CES in January of 2020. At the time, the plan was to put it into production by the end of 2022, but then a little something called COVID happened, along with some reported production delays. As Patrick George wrote for The Verge:

Earlier this year, Fisker faced a choice between delaying production to correct software issues related to its driver-assistance system or going ahead and fixing the software later on. It chose the latter. Some early Ocean models will receive over-the-air updates early next year.

Still, production kicked off near the end of 2022, and now the first one has made it into customer hands. That’s about as on-time as you can reasonably expect during a global pandemic, and it meant that the Ocean didn’t really risk running stale.

Fisker Pear

With Ocean deliveries underway in Europe and the regulatory ball rolling in America, Fisker’s next big feats will be selling the Ocean in American and bringing the ambitious $29,900 PEAR crossover to market. That entry-level electric crossover is set to be built in Ohio by Foxconn, the same company that makes a massive number of iPhones. Contract manufacturing, am I right?

(Photo credits: Fisker)

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33 thoughts on “The First Customer-Spec Fisker Ocean Has Been Delivered Thanks To The Benefits Of Contract Manufacturing

  1. I think these EV designers think they need to overthink the interior design. I appreciate the cleanliness but is just doesn’t feel special. I bet because they optimize the exterior so much for aero that they can only ever tweak light designs going forward, or risk a worse drag coefficient, that they are purposefully making the interiors bland so the 2nd gen version has a strong selling point.

  2. I like the “even the tiny windows roll down” concept.

    I do not like that screen however. I’m don’t usually care to complain about massive tablets glued to the dash, but holy crap does that thing dominate the interior.

  3. It pretty much looks like every other SUV out there, but with a weird rear end and window treatment, including some sheet metal where the rear side windows should be.

  4. Congrats to Fisker but its just a drop in the ocean.
    I remain skeptical. Fisker has often been shown to be all wet.
    My the depths to which I will sink for a pun.
    Sorry, I’m a little salty today.

  5. The Ocean feels like a cleaner design, but with something of the side profile of a Volvo XC60. The rearmost side windows are even a little reminiscent of the C30. A clean sheet but with design language from Volvo is not a bad thing, witness the Polestar 2 and 3. Let’s hope they are not eventually all orphan cars like the Fisker Karma.

  6. I hope they make it. I live near the Foxconn plant in Ohio–it was formerly owned by GM to produce the Cruze. It hurt our local economy to lose that plant and Lordstown Motors is shitting the bed, so hopefully the Pear works

      1. They produced 40 trucks and now are begging for money because Foxconn stopped funding them
        I was glad to see Foxconn buy the plant. I have a lot more faith in them. That said, the electric tractor and the Fisker product that they’ll be building aren’t exactly blue chip sales prospects

  7. I see no compelling reason to buy this very generic blob of an SUV thingy over any of the other electric SUV thingys currently on the market….and I’d like to hear what the Autopian’s tame designer thinks of the way they handled the rear 3/4 design of this…..cause it looks a mess to my eye. And the interior is as plain and boring as it can be……

    1. Disagree, I think it’s cute and has personality, especially with the dog in it showing off the rear window opening.

    2. The rear small windows are designed so that the the CUV has the “California option”…all the windows in the vehicle can be powered open at once. Whether that’s a good or bad idea I’ll leave to someone else’s opinion.

  8. Contract manufacturers and especially Magna -Steyr are used by every company for a portion of their vehcicles and by some for all of them. Magna-Steyr has built minis in the past. Its a way to augment your manufacturing or in this case to handle it.

  9. Saw one with a mfr. plate in Metro Detroit the other day – a lot smaller than I expected.

    I’ll be interested to see what happens with fisker – the only reason they have any hope at all is Magna.

  10. So Fisker (apparently) learned from his misadventures in bolting the things together. Doing the design work, which the guy is brilliant at, while having people with established plants and decades of experience bolting cars together handling those things doing what they are brilliant at works. Go figure.

  11. So a Magna designed by Fisker? I wonder how much the price will be after everyone takes a bite out of the pie. I get using an experienced car builder but an experienced phone builder? Not sure thats a plus.

    1. Foxconn: We have experience snapping together small lithium powered things. We’re about to get a working car factory with the kinks worked out. The area has people experienced in bolting cars together. What could go wrong?

    1. I have to figure it’s the subcontractor’s cost plus a profit margin.

      Of course, the sub’s costs are likely way lower than they would be for the designer to stand up the manufacturing capability on their own, so even with the sub taking a cut it’s likely more affordable that way.

  12. Ah, so they’re using Magna this time and not Valmet.

    Another contract mfr is NedCar, a Dutch one.

    There needs to be an American contract car mfr…

    1. “There needs to be an American contract car mfr…”
      Well Magna is pretty close with plants in US, Canada and Mexico.
      I’m sure with enough volume they will adapt to fit.

    2. Magna is owned by a Canadian family called the Stronachs, they are pretty much as “American” you can get. They are also big in horse race tracks in the States.

      Fisker got literally burnt the first time around with the EV.. remember A123?

      I mean these days everyone is related to everyone someway or the other.. eg Hyundai makes seats for Rivian. You have to pick and choose your battles unless you have super deep pockets.

      I waiting for Musk to throw shade at Fisker, since they had pretty bad blood before.

    3. Valmet was supposed to make two other EVs but both of those went bankrupt this year. At least Lightyear managed over a month of production.

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