Los Angeles Times

Tesla plans Model X deliveries this month

CEO Elon Musk says the first electric crossovers will be handed over to customers at the company’s auto factory

- By Jerry Hirsch jerry. hirsch@ latimes. com

Tesla Motors Inc. plans to deliver the first Model X electric crossovers to customers near the end of this month at its auto factory in Fremont, Calif.

Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk announced Wednesday on Twitter that the first production cars would be handed over Sept 29. The X is a closely related sibling to Tesla’s Model S electric sedan. Including the discontinu­ed Roadster, it will be the Palo Alto automaker’s third vehicle.

Musk tweeted that with the same options, the Model X would cost about $ 5,000 more than the S because of its larger size and body complexity. The rear- wheeldrive base model of the S with a 70- kWh battery and 230- mile range starts at $ 70,000 before any federal and state incentives for electric cars.

The electric car company plans to offer a fully loaded Signature Series version of the Model Xf or $ 132,000.

Tesla originally said itwould start manufactur­ing the Model X at the end of 2013, with sales to begin last year, but the programis behind schedule.

The Model X, designed at Tesla’s studio in Hawthorne, will fit seven adults in three rows of seats, the automaker said. It will use Tesla’s flat battery pack, positioned on the underside of the vehicle. That clears space in the cabin and also allows for a second trunk under the hood.

Musk also said Tesla plans to put the Model 3, “our smaller and lower cost sedan,” into production “in about 2 years.”

Tesla plans to reveal the look of the car in March and begin taking orders then.

Musk said the Model 3, which is expected to sell for about $ 35,000, has towait until Tesla’s giant “gigafactor­y” battery manufactur­ing plant under constructi­on near Reno is fully operationa­l.

Tesla is counting on the battery manufactur­ing cost reductions and efficienci­es that it expects from the plant to help keep downthe cost of the lower- priced sedan.

 ?? Paul Sancya
Associated Press ?? CHIEF DESIGNER Franz von Holzhausen talks about the doors on the Tesla Model X at the 2013 North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit.
Paul Sancya Associated Press CHIEF DESIGNER Franz von Holzhausen talks about the doors on the Tesla Model X at the 2013 North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit.

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