The model starts at about $25,000 and has a 0-100 km acceleration time as short as less than 5 seconds.

(Photo source: Leapmotor)

Chinese electric car startup Leapmotor said today that its flagship SUV, the C11, will be delivered to its first owners on October 22 at its factory in Jinhua, Zhejiang province.

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Deliveries of the model, the first under Leapmotor's C architecture, will begin soon in other cities as well, the company said.

The C11 opened for pre-sale earlier this year and goes on sale September 29 with three options, priced at RMB 159,800 ($25,000), RMB 179,800 and RMB 199,800, respectively.

The C11 measures 4,750 x 1,905 x 1,650mm and has a wheelbase of 2,930mm. It has a maximum NEDC range of over 600km and the dual-motor 4WD version has a 0-100km/h acceleration time of less than 5 seconds.

The model is equipped with Leap Pilot 3.0 driver assistance system, with modules including chip, algorithm, perception and data developed by the company in-house.

It also includes 28 sensors including 11 cameras, 5 millimeter-wave radars, 12 ultrasonic radars, and 128G of high precision map storage space reserved for future upgrades.

Leapmotor delivered 4,095 vehicles in September, up 432 percent year-on-year, but down about 9 percent from August, which the company blamed on a shortage of chip supply.

Until the C11 is available, the company was selling the S01, a coupe, and the T03, a mini-vehicle.

Leapmotor founder Zhu Jiangming has said the company is so confident in its self-driving technology that it expects to achieve full-scene autonomous driving by 2024, surpassing Tesla within three years.

By the end of 2025, the company will launch eight models covering a price range of less than 350,000 yuan, and plans to enter overseas markets in 2022.

The overall sales target for Leapmotor is 800,000 units by 2025, said Zhu.

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