Fabulist said:
if it follows the usual pattern, the convertible is going to be heavier than the hard top version because of all the reinforcement needed to keep the chassis stiffness.
-- Fab.
Ah, but that is just the point, Fab, it doesn't follow the usual pattern. Fisker's aluminum space-frame design provides the structural rigidity. In a normal monocoque designed car, the body panels themselves provide part of the structural rigidity, but with a space-frame, the body panels are primarily "draped" on the frame. That is why cars like the Karma, Audi R8, Ferraris, etc. can have lightweight body panels or virtually unlimited shapes made of non-steel material. It is also why the Sunset doesn't have to be heavier (except for the convertible top mechanics and hardware). On another note, I do not believe there was ever any consideration given to including solar on the sunset.
The timing of the convertible Sunset would more likely follow other models simply because it is a smaller market. At the higher price, it is a niche car. Given the same amount of cost to set up and prepare for production, it probably makes more sense to move into larger-volume market segments when making capital spending decisions.