The Fisker Ocean is Under Investigation for Doors that Won't Open

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Oh, to be a fly on the wall at Fisker’s headquarters right about now. The struggling electric automaker is facing bankruptcy, accounting issues, and shaky reviews, but its troubles are far from over. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recently said it opened a preliminary investigation into the company’s Ocean SUV after receiving reports that the latch handles prevented opening the EV’s doors.


The NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation has received 14 complaints from owners who say that they were unable to open the doors. Some said the doors wouldn’t open from either direction, which is obviously less than ideal if there’s an emergency. There were also reports that the Ocean’s emergency override mechanism failed to remedy the issue.


This is bad news for Fisker, but it’s just another log on the fire at this point. The company’s stock has been delisted, and its talks with Nissan regarding a potentially life-saving investment have fallen through. In regulatory filings, it noted significant doubts that it would stay afloat without new investments, though it’s currently unclear where that could come from.


Fisker has also struggled to sell its existing Ocean inventory, as spotty reviews have left a bad taste in potential buyers’ mouths. It recently slashed prices on entry-level Ocean variants, dropping the cost of entry to the mid-$20,000 range. The move tanked the values of the SUVs already in owners’ driveways and likely won’t do much to bolster sales, as buyers recognize the risks of purchasing a vehicle from a company that could go under at almost any moment.


[Image: Fisker]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Flameded Flameded on Apr 09, 2024

    Well, that's Slightly Better than an Investigation of a Fisker being Under the Ocean with doors that won't open..

  • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later 7 days ago

    Probably should investigate the buyers too, maybe a basic psych eval?

  • Random1 2015 VW GTI w DSG, 112k milesOne warranty fix(legendary water pump, $0 out of pocket).Otherwise, regular synthetic oil changes, all done myself, 2 DSG oil changes, also myself. New brakes all around, paid to have those done. That's it, nothing out of pocket besides regularly scheduled maintenance.
  • Jeff Murilee deserves a pay raise his Junkyard Finds are among the best columns on this site.
  • Fred OK so folks don't like 4 cylinder hybrids in their $100,000 Mercedes. Do we really think sales will increase that much with twice the cyliners and another $30,000 price increase? Then again I'm seeing luxury buyers are kind of immune to inflation these days, so what do I know about this market.
  • Chris P Bacon "Ford sold Five Hundreds and Montegos just for the 2006-2007 model years and then hurriedly renamed them the Taurus and Sable."Nope, they were sold as 2005s as well. I had an '05 500 Limited. Ran it hard, around 20k a year. But it was a great highway car, the 3.0 Vulcan motor wasn't fast but it regularly turned high 20s MPG. I had the HVAC solenoid issue, but it never left me stranded. 220k when it got totaled by a piece of I-75 south of Detroit that got thrown at me by a truck. Michigan is finally rebuilding that piece of road now.
  • SCE to AUX If hot girls could actually sell cars, Mercury would be the nation's best-selling brand.Instead, it ultimately comes down to the cars, the price, and mfr support.
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