ILIFE V3s Pro Robot Vacuum Cleaner, Tangle-free Suction , Slim, Automatic Self-Charging Robotic Vacuum Cleaner, Daily Schedule Cleaning, Ideal For Pet Hair,Hard Floor and Low Pile Carpet,Pearl White

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ILIFE V3s Pro Robot Vacuum Cleaner, Tangle-free Suction , Slim, Automatic Self-Charging Robotic Vacuum Cleaner, Daily Schedule Cleaning, Ideal For Pet Hair,Hard Floor and Low Pile Carpet,Pearl White
ILIFE V3s Pro Robot Vacuum Cleaner, Tangle-free Suction , Slim, Automatic Self-Charging Robotic Vacuum Cleaner, Daily Schedule Cleaning, Ideal For Pet Hair,Hard Floor and Low Pile Carpet,Pearl White
$148.21

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Product Features

  • Fits Pet Owners: With a tangle-free pet hair care suction, V3s Pro Robot Vacuum focuses on picking up hair without tangle; It also tackles dirt, crumbs and debris effectively on hardwood, tile, laminate, stone and low pile carpet.Runtime : 90-100 minutes
  • Slim: V3s Pro has a low profile design, capable of running under beds and sofa where dirt hides
  • Automatic Cleaning and Charging: This robot vacuum can run routine cleaning automatically based on preset schedule; It goes back to charging dock on its own when battery gets low; Each full charging supports 90-100 minutes run
  • Anti-Bump and Anti-Fall: Built-in infrared sensors can identify steps and obstacles, so the vacuum can run away from drop-offs and collisions
  • Easy to Start: Starts cleaning by remote or one-button touch on the robot vacuum; Tip for easy maintenance: empty dustbin and clean the filter after each use; replace filter every month
  • A 12-month warranty and U. S. customer service team provide you with peace of mind service. Note: renewed version is provided with 3 months product warranty only
  • Anti-dropping sensors prevent dangerous drop-offs
  • Fits Pet Owners: With a tangle-free pet hair care suction, V3s Pro Robot Vacuum focuses on picking up hair without tangle; It also tackles dirt, crumbs and debris effectively on hardwood, tile, laminate, stone and low pile carpet.Runtime : 90-100 minutes
  • Slim: V3s Pro has a low profile design, capable of running under beds and sofa where dirt hides
  • Automatic Cleaning and Charging: This robot vacuum can run routine cleaning automatically based on preset schedule; It goes back to charging dock on its own when battery gets low; Each full charging supports 90-100 minutes run
  • Anti-Bump and Anti-Fall: Built-in infrared sensors can identify steps and obstacles, so the vacuum can run away from drop-offs and collisions
  • Easy to Start: Starts cleaning by remote or one-button touch on the robot vacuum; Tip for easy maintenance: empty dustbin and clean the filter after each use; replace filter every month
  • A 12-month warranty and U. S. customer service team provide you with peace of mind service. Note: renewed version is provided with 3 months product warranty only
  • Anti-dropping sensors prevent dangerous drop-offs

Product Specifications

Brand ILIFE
Model Name V3s Pro Robotic Vacuum,
Special Feature cordless, pet hair care and tangle-free
Color Pearl White
Product Dimensions 11.8"L x 11.8"W x 3"H
Included Components robot vacuum x1,User manual x1,remote control x1,extra hepa filter x2,extra sides brush x2,cleaning brush x1,AC adapter x1, Charging dock x1
Filter Type Cloth
Battery Life 3 years
Voltage 110 Volts
Capacity 300 Milliliters
Power Source Battery Powered
Are Batteries Included Yes
Control Method Remote
Form Factor Robotic
Item Weight 4.5 pounds
Manufacturer ILIFE INNOVATION LIMITED
ASIN B06Y56NDF4
Country of Origin China
Item model number V3s Pro
Batteries 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer No
Specific instructions for use dual action, hard floor, carpet
Volume 37800 Cubic Centimeters
Assembly required No
Batteries required Yes

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Product Price History

Price history for ILIFE V3s Pro Robot Vacuum Cleaner, Tangle-free Suction , Slim, Automatic Self-Charging Robotic Vacuum Cleaner, Daily Schedule Cleaning, Ideal For Pet Hair,Hard Floor and Low Pile Carpet,Pearl White
Latest updates:
  • $148.21 - July 27, 2024
  • $91.29 - May 16, 2024
  • $109.99 - May 16, 2024
Since: May 16, 2024
  • Highest Price: $148.21 - July 27, 2024
  • Lowest Price: $91.29 - May 16, 2024

Related Product Deals & User Reviews

  1. My Robot Friend. I have had my robot friend, Simon, for a week. First impressions upon opening the box was an “Oooo Aahhh”. The directions said to let your new robot friend charge overnight before first use, but of course, I ran him around immediately to just see how he works! He worked for about ten minutes. I couldn’t figure out how to get him to his home (charging station), but it turns out, he can find his own way home just fine. I recommend that you do take a few minutes to read the directions and familiarize yourself with the remote. It took about 4 hours or so for Simon to fully charge, then I turned him loose. Let me just say, I thought my floors were clean, or, at least, pretty clean. As it turns out, they were not. They were not clean at all. Simon has picked up so much fur, dirt, dust, it’s unbelievable. My floors have literally never looked better! They are CLEAN. For real clean. I’ve always had a hard time cleaning under the bed, but now I don’t have to worry about it at all, because my robot friend takes care of it.I have all hardwood floors and tile. I also have a few throw rugs, some thick, some thin. Simon does a perfect job on the floors, and has no problems navigating over the throw rugs (though he might turn up a corner, but he will run back over it and still get it clean). I don’t think your robot friend would work very well if you have a lot of or mostly carpet. If you have hardwood or mostly hardwood, you will love your new robot friend.Simon mostly gets from room to room okay – the “up” entry points he cannot do on his own. For example, he cannot get over the hump into my kitchen, but he can get down the hump. He also cannot get over the hump to get in the bathrooms. This is actually fine for me, because I prefer to control when he goes into the kitchen anyway so that I can shake off the rugs and/or pick up the cat food and water bowls and any shoes or other things that might be on the floor. I just put a bar stool in his way to keep him from exiting the kitchen when it’s time for him to clean in the kitchen.Simon will clean for about 3 or 3.5 hours. He does not have a “plan” so to speak, not like a person would say go from corner to the center of the room, but he is still very thorough, and obviously, his plan is way better than mine since my floors are so much cleaner than they ever were when I was in charge. My advice is to just trust the process and let your robot friend find his way around on his own! Just make sure that you pick up any cords, especially small cords like phone charging cords, and shoe laces or the like, so that he doesn’t accidentally grab onto something he shouldn’t. Simon also has sensors so that when he comes to a piece of furniture or a wall, he will slow down so as to gently bump it before he turns off into a new direction. I have also noticed that if he comes into contact with a chair or table leg, he will often go in a circle all the way around the leg to clean around it.Once your robot friend is done doing your dirty work for you, he will go back home on his own. If your robot friend cannot find his way home, you may not have provided him enough space. Is that any way to treat your new best friend?? Make sure that he has several feet of clear space in front of his charging station, and that there are a few feet of clear space on the sides of the charging station as well. Also, make sure to empty out his dust bin after every use.One of the fortunate side effects of having my new robot friend, is the “give a mouse a cookie” effect it seems to have had. Give a person a clean floor, and the person may say oh, it looks so clean in here, let me pick up this shirt and put it away. The person then notices that the bathroom trash can is full; since the floors look so nice, the bathroom should be clean, too *cleans bathroom*, and so on.The only thing about my new robot friend, which isn’t enough to bother me at all, is that he is, well, he’s not super loud, but he’s not very quiet either. So, if you are watching tv, you may need to turn it up just a bit if you are running your robot friend while you’re at home. Well worth it for the service he provides, though.Overall, I do recommend this little robot. I am very pleased with this purchase. If you’re in the market for a robot floor cleaning wizard, don’t hesitate to click that Buy Now button.

  2. I bought this two weeks ago and it has been in use on every weekday. I knew this was not SMART (no learning, no mapping, no internet, no app) and that this only had the horizontal ‘whisking’ brushes in front of a horizontal suction tube, not a downward facing tube and/or a roller brush. I have never owned a robot vacuum cleaner before but have owned/used a variety of other types.We have no pets, I have long hair, the other person occasionally cuts their hair using clippers in one room and our floors are mostly oak to pale, with one room in terracotta red tile, one room in dark grey lino and rugs – two of which are dark grey and dark brown.It vacuums for about 1h 40m for us before turning off suction and making its random way home. In this time it covers about 95% of the floor area of the ground floor or basically all of the first floor in our two storey 3 bed home with small kitchen extension and conservatory. It has made it back to base every time, although in one case it took 17m and was looking decidedly tired. It will never vacuum within about a 1m radius of the docking station as it actively avoids this area unless trying to get home (so don’t put the docking station next to an area you want cleaning!). Most of the time it is in random mode, but will occasionally decide to follow an edge and clean that.I would recommend it for daily cleaning of tiles, lino and laminate (including dry food crumbs but not wet/damp spillages or e.g. vegetable peelings) and for light vacuuming (‘whisking’) of carpets and rugs.• This may not be for you if you are going to be in the house while it’s vacuuming and would find it irritating or frustrating watching it repeatedly move round randomly and never learn or if you want it to do the whole clean quickly – it wanders around randomly until the battery starts getting low then goes home and doesn’t learn.• This is not for you if you expect it to be your only vacuum and you have carpet or steps.Detail from us that are others might find useful (this is the longest most detailed review I have ever written but covers things I was wondering before purchasing this).Level changes• It generally copes with most of our floor with no issue including joining strips between laminate/tile/lino/carpet at the same level.• It has no issue with getting down minor level changes with or without joining strips.• When going up, the ‘harder’ the level change the more restricted the angle it needs to be successful and so the more tries it usually needs to get up.• It generally (3 times out of 4) gets up a join we have that involves a level change of 3/4cm with a 5cm wide joining strip that is pretty horizontal and has a 1/2cm gap between the edge of the joining strip and the lower floor. Once it appeared to get stuck on this while in its ‘go home’ behaviour pattern (see below for ‘go home’ behaviours).• It usually (once in every 2 attempts) gets up a sharp step change we have in tile that is 1cm high.• It occasionally (once in every 10 attempts) gets over a level change we have that is 1cm high with a joining strip that is 5cm wide at roughly 30 degrees.• It has never fallen down the steps (but see steps section below).RugsWe have 4 rugs.• It will get on to the low flat grey and black heavy duty rug (woven textured top, rubberised back) although it will occasionally back away from it and it won’t pick much up. But our normal vacuum doesn’t either so we generally shake it out the back door.• It will get on our 2cm thick brown coconut fibre mat but won’t pick up much and there are bits of this rug in its collection box when we empty it. But our normal vacuum doesn’t either so we generally pick off any hair and shake it out – and when we shake this rug out we get far more loose fibres coming out than I find in the collection box.• It will push around and fold up and climb on top of our white bathroom rug with short squashed down tassels and a partly rubberised back – it’s brushes get under the rug but then there is clearance for the rug to go under the cleaner so the rug ends up concertinaed around the front of it until it all gets too much and it mountain climbs over it. As the rug is normally hung on the side of the bath rather than on the floor we don’t mind this.• We haven’t let it near our very long haired reindeer skin rugProgramming the scheduleThis is quite easy once you know what’s happening but I needed to read the instructions carefully and they are not that clear, also see accessibility section below.• You can only program something to happen daily – it doesn’t distinguish between days of the week.• Make sure the vacuum is turned on (switch on the side)• You need to tell it what time it is. Press the ‘clock face’ button then use the up and down arrow keys to set the hour, then the left and right keys to change to minutes, then press the ‘clock face’ button again. It’s a 12h format with am/pm so watch out for that.• You need to tell it when to start vacuuming. Repeat the above step but press the button with the ‘Alarm bell’ icon inside a circle in it instead of the ‘clock face’at the beginning an end. The vacuum will beep to let you know it’s got it.• The remote control will now show two times – the current time and the vacuuming time.If you turn off the vacuum cleaner using the switch on the side it will forget this programming when you turn it back on but confusingly the display on the remote won’t change. This is what the instructions say will happen, and is the way of getting rid of any schedule.SoundWhether you’re happy with this depends on your reaction to sounds. Doesn’t bother me, but the other person in the house prefers turning it off when working at home.• The volume on hard flooring is about as loud as a hairdryer on a medium power setting and when on carpet as if the hairdryer is on a low setting.• The suction noise is pretty constant.• It makes some clunks as it goes over level changes and when it bumps into things (see ‘obstacles’ below).ObstaclesIn principal it moves around quite rapidly, and keeps an eye out. If it sees anything it slows down and then stops just before hitting it. I’d say this works about 95% of the time and the rest of the time the bumper comes into play (it knows if it’s hit something with the bumper and the bumper is spring-loaded). Areas where it doesn’t stop before bumping things don’t seem random (ie it has the issue repeatedly) and are:• Anything that is 1m away from its charging point in a straight line – the only time it will reverse any significant amount is when coming out of the docking station at the beginning of cleaning, and for this distance it can’t see behind it and the bumper is in the wrong place.• Any furniture in the conservatory – not sure if this is because of brightness or heat or both.• Plastic in matt silver grey when approaching at right angles (washing machine, bin, fridge).• Very black polished marble edge (hearth).• Dining chair legs – from certain approaches doesn’t seem to stop in time (but does slow down so knows there’s something there, just not exactly where).• Black size 7 trainers – note these are light enough that even when it hits them the bumper doesn’t trigger so it pushes them around until they reach a wall and the bumper does trigger.It doesn’t damage any of these obstacles, although it might if they were fragile.We didn’t manage to make it suck up a cable. By itself it just pushed them out of the way. We could feed one under but they didn’t get sucked up or wrapped round the axle and after a time the random moves ended up with the vacuum wandering off and leaving the cable behind.StepsIt reliably stops at the top of our stairs (medium pile light coffee colour carpet), but to us it isn’t worth risking it falling down the flight, hurting itself and potentially damaging the floor at the bottom. We tend to leave it in one upstairs room at a time and move it after 20 mins or so and just vacuum the landing with the old vacuum at the same time as we do the stairs. Any method we have thought of to ensure it will never fall off involve putting something physically across the top of the stairs which doesn’t seem sensible when we might forget to take it up and fall over it!Loose laminate beadingAhem… so we may have not got round to sticking the beading down around the edge of our living room’s laminate floor. When it cleans around the ‘external corner’ around the hearth (the bit you’d worry about a child falling over and damaging themselves on) it lifts the beading, pings it out of the recess its in and then pushes the beading around. It doesn’t do this in any of the rooms where the beading is stuck down.AccessibilityNone of this causes me issues and I’m not an expert but I couldn’t remember other reviews commenting specifically on these areas.• Remote control buttons. The direction buttons are black, other buttons are medium blue and the images on the buttons are in white. Decent size buttons which are fine for thumbs.• Remote control display. The time display is about 7mm tall. The alarm time display is about 6mm tall. The am/pm on both of these is about 1.5mm tall. The display is not back-lit, and has about as much contrast as a typical calculator.• Emptying the vacuum. You can open the vacuum to access the collection box with one finger by pressing the lid on the top. You can lift the box out with one finger using the plastic handle but it feels more secure using two hands. Opening the box is much easier with two hands than one. You’d have to be a lot more dexterous than me to remove the filters with one hand (you need to remove the main L-shaped filter to empty It). Emptying it can be done with one hand but is easier with two. Cleaning the filters is much easier with two hands (one to hold the filter, one to use the brush). Reassembling the collection box can be done with one hand as can putting it back in the vacuum and closing it up. It’s helpful to have a surface near your bin to put things down on while doing this. It is possible to put things back together wrongly or put the box back in the vacuum the wrong way round but if you do either the box won’t fit in the vacuum or the lid won’t close. A careless type could break it by trying to force it rather than fixing it.• Noise. Both in vacuuming mode and getting home mode it makes enough noise so you shouldn’t accidentally stand on it unless you have the TV or music on at a level that covers the noise up or are hard of hearing.• Vacuum colour contrast. It is shiny white with highly contrasting good size black sections on the side and on top. There are small blue LED lights on the top but these aren’t always on.• Speed. It doesn’t travel too fast, but someone who’s wobbly on their pins would need to be careful of it.• Getting in the way. If it bumps into you/your foot it will take a few moments to get out of the way, and because it’s random, it might be up to about 30 seconds in a normal worst case unless it’s trying to get home (see below) or is in one of its edge clean moments (it will go in circles around the obstacle for a bit until it decides to change back to random) when it could take a lot longer. It feels very odd if it bumps into your toes (but doesn’t hurt).Security• We have not had to connect it to the internet. It doesn’t seem to have it’s own built in internet (if it does its not always on). So in our opinion the risk of it sucking up data about us and beaming it back to the manufacturers for onward sale is acceptably low.Manual/special modesYou can rotate it with the left and right buttons on the remote (it rotates a specific amount, not just for how long you hold the buttons down for) and also tell it to move in its forward direction with the up arrow. This does work but can be frustrating as it carries on doing it’s thing while you’re doing this. You can tell it to rotate right, but it might immediately decide to rotate right again. And when it does make a random decision it feels like it stops listening for instructions from the remote for maybe half a second.Spot clean and edge clean seem to work but not relevant if you just stick it on while you’re out. But could be handy in some circumstances.Get home behaviourUnderstanding the ‘get home’ behaviour seems key to whether it will be able to get home!It vacuums randomly until it thinks it’s battery is getting too low. Then it turns off suction and carries moving. This seems less random and is basically a mix of random/edge following (more edge following than normal) with occasional long straight line moves if it hasn’t found home yet. Once it gets into a zone that’s within about 4m of the docking station and is within 45 degrees of directly in front of it and is pointing it’s sensors in the right direction it suddenly changes what it’s doing! It slows down, and moves towards a point that is directly in front of the docking station. It then straightens up and moves slowly towards it. When it reaches it it gives a happy beep and goes to sleep. Points we have noticed:• If the docking station is positioned so it’s unlikely to come within 4m while pointing at it (ie in a corridor pointing towards the nearest wall) this reduces the chance of it finding home before it runs out of power.• If there is an obstacle in its way once it’s doing the last approach it will back off and try again, but it will keep doing exactly the same thing – this isn’t random any more – so if it didn’t work the first time, it’s not going to work. Our example is a dining chair that had been pushed back so the leg was directly in the way.• If you have a level change on the final approach it has to approach from an angle to get over it it’s gonna just sit there beached on the level change trying to slowly approach the station – none of its sensors are going to tell it anything is wrong and it doesn’t seem to realise it isn’t getting closer so won’t back off and make another random move (which it would do in normal cleaning mode).• If it is under a dining table when it gets tired it can spend a long time trying to get out as the ‘get home’ behaviours don’t seem very effective at getting it out from under a table with 4 times 6 chair legs.For info, after trialling various locations the docking station is currently under an 80cm wide cupboard next to a pair of weighing scales with a clear space of 3m in front of it (this space is a corridor) and the vacuum gets home reliably. It does mean we have to get it out to empty it though.

  3. Worth every penny so far. I was pretty skeptical and didn’t want to break the bank on something that might suck. Reviews on this product were great, and now I see why! It’s not the most amazing I’m sure, but at this price point, I’m ecstatic! Two males, a dog, and an old cat that sheds more than Big Foot and this thing keeps my floors darn clean! I hate vacuuming, I hate sweeping, I hate chores honestly, and this does that for me. It’s a bit random in it’s tracking, and I’m still learning how it works, but so far it works just fine. A little loud, but it’s a vacuum, why wouldn’t it be? My pets don’t seem to mind it and it handles transitions from hardwood to carpets VERY well. This bad boy even rides up the side of one of my fans sometimes and I think it’s going to get stuck but it gets itself off just fine. I wouldn’t hesitate to buy this model at all. The controller is also pretty handy. Do yourself a favor and stop dealing with vacuuming all the time. Even though the thing spins around like an idiot sometimes, eventually it gets pretty much everything, even places you wouldn’t think.ONE THING TO NOTE! Make sure your floors are clear of larger obects (pet toys, cables/wires, w/e else). It’ll do fine with them, but sometimes will stop and avoid a large area or get stuck on a wire. I haven’t had it suck up anything that I didn’t want it to. Just gets stuck in the bristles a little bit.Will update my review if I have any issues!UPDATE——–6 months in, still fantastic. She’s a bit overzealous and takes longer than I’d like to notice it’s running stuff over, but it gets the job done still! One spinning brush got a bit messed up after running over a phone charger and wrapping around it (phone charger was undamaged and everything still functioned on the vacuum). It’ll run over clothes and get stuck, but hey, it’s not a maid, it’s a vacuum. Sometimes it takes an extra pass to get everything, but still easier than doing it myself. Overall, I love it!My girlfriend got a Shark for her place after her mom bought it for her, and I swear mine is much better! It doesn’t do as much random roaming and can actually find its way out of a corner without just going back and forth over and over again. Not sure if it does a better job cleaning up because her place is pristine most of the time, but I’d bet they’re pretty similar. They do the exact same job but mine was $100 less, so really it comes down to longevity at this point, and I feel confident that mine will go long enough to justify paying almost half the price.

  4. One of the Best Buys Ever. Purchased the iLife v3s pro at end of November, 2021 on Black Friday sale. So it has had daily use for 2 months.I had soured on robot vacuums after going through 2 expensive iRobot vacs 7-8 years ago that got pet hair hopelessly entangled in its main brush gears and constant hangups under chairs. The iLife caught my attention first because of the low price and the high customer ratings. My interest piqued when I read that it had no central brush, just two counter-rotating side brushes. Simple design. One thing that did work well on the iRobots was their single side brushes, which had few issues. The iLife having 2 seemed like a good idea. I have a super shedder Golden. Reviews confirmed that this did great on pet hair. So I sprung for this vacuum, and so glad I did.I programmed the schedule for it to run automatically every morning before I get up to clean a large great room, kitchen with a table rug with short tassels and runner along the island, attached mud/laundry, an entry with a thick rug, and a long hallway. The v3s bin is full every day, mostly with hair, but also a lot of small crumbs and fine dust. It’s pretty impressive what it picks up, actually. It climbs up the entry rug, which is almost and inch thick, with no problem. It has never tumbled down the staircase near the entry. Sometimes the side brushes catch a corner of the kitchen rugs, but the vac does a maneuver where it rotates 90 degrees and goes to one side or the other and disentangles from the raised rug. I never have to intervene. It does well on the carpet in the great room. All of the rugs are very low pile, and the carpet is medium pile. I don’t know how it would handle shag rugs or carpet. It does dishevel the kitchen table rug tassels a bit. You do have to tie up electrical chords a few inches off the floor, and it did get hung up a few times on the Christmas tree skirt.If you let it run, it cleans for about 1.5 hours and returns to the charger. The return is hit and miss. But I found about an hour is long enough, so after that time I pick up the unit, take it over to the hallway down which the charger is located, aim it at the charger and push the start button to start it on its way. After a few seconds I press the Home button on the remote and it reliably finds its way back and starts charging. All of that takes about 15 seconds.Daily 5 minute or less maintenance involves wiping dust from the front and back screens with a wet paper towel or kleenex, and emptying the dust bin. When I dump the dust bin, I take out the main filter and tap it clean against the inside of the garbage can. I tap the open dust bin gently against the garbage can to dislodge dust from the fine filter. Every few days I take the fine filter out and tap it against the inside of the garbage can to dislodge even more fine dust. I haven’t replaced the fine dust filter yet, but I did buy a box of 10 from iLife on Amazon, which I think will be about a 2 year or more supply. After about 6 weeks I noticed some fuzz coming from underneath the bases of the side brushes. They were easy to unscrew and both had dog hair and lint wound around the stem of the brushes that was easy to pull out. No hair down in the gears. This took about 5 minutes and will probably be needed on a fairly regular basis.Does it clean perfectly? No, but almost. Along the kitchen runner where it has one wheel up on the rug and one wheel on the wood floor, it misses a few crumbs that I have to pick up with a broom or my Dyson. Occasionally there is a crumb that I wet a finger and pick up by hand. Now and then the corners need to be cleaned by hand. But overall it has almost eliminated the need to vacuum regularly. Bottom line, I love this thing. Praying that it holds up long term.

  5. Claudia Cristina Vieira May 2, 2023 at 12:00 am

    Muito prática!!! Varre bem.

  6. It comes with excellent documentation for set-up, maintenance and trouble-shooting. Any situation that’s come up has been well-addressed in the manual. It’s very reasonably priced compared to other machines.Pros: It’s easy to set a schedule, easy to use off-schedule, and does a great job sucking up pethair. It has options to edge-clean and spot-clean, both of which work well. It holds a charge well, runs for a hour or more at a stretch, and recharges quite quickly. It gets itself out of corners easily, and the cliff sensor is excellent. It will try valiantly to bump over cords and door jams, and is usually successful. Basic maintenance is straightforward and easily performed at home. It came with a spare set of brushes, which are easily swapped out by the user.Cons: It’s not programmable, so the random pathing can miss areas. Its capacity is limited, so it needs emptying daily at a minimum, more often if there’s any build-up of hair. The lack of beater-bar/ rotary brushes likely makes it less effective on carpeting (I use it exclusively on hardwood.) It’s really more of a robotic broom+dustpan combo than a carpet-cleaner.

  7. I do love my little idiot, but…. This is my experience, your device may or may not behave the same way. I am pleased that there are devices on the market, where the price has come down enough that it is worth it for me to make this purchase. I have some chronic health issues, and after reading KC Davis’s book and consuming her podcast… I do not want to live feeling like this is a moral failing of my life. It’s just stupid housework. So I have been looking for simple tools or techie things to make my life easier. Overall, this purchase was a win, but it definitely has come with some weird quirks.1.) He CANNOT find his way back to the charger dock. I’ve gotten to a point where I just stop him, pick him up and go put him back on the charger. It’s not worth it to watch him wander around the house trying to find the charging dock.2.) You will still need to vacuum (and mop) the house. Don’t get it twisted. It is a nice light vacuum that will pick up cat litter, pet fur, other light debris. But your actual vacuum will still be needed. So I do love that… I can run it every day on full blast and I feel so much lighter in my soul. And then when I have the energy, I will actually vacuum. I have some health issues and have been very insecure the past couple years about trying to keep my house clean. I don’t have enough spoons to give. So having a little device that can vacuum each half of the house every other day is amazing. And then maybe once a week or every couple days I’ll have it mop the kitchen.3.) Speaking of mopping, it will not know the difference between carpet and tile. The first few times I ran it on any type of setting, I made sure to monitor it. And even now I don’t run it unless I’m home. So anytime I run it I will section off a part of the house by putting up a “baby gate.” Haha This is necessary, because the battery will run out on the 100% sucking vacuuming before it could do my entire bedroom, hallway, living room, kitchen. Which is fine. It is also necessary to blockade with the mop function because it will just go mop the living room that is carpeted. It doesn’t care either way. So I have to block it off to keep it in the kitchen on the tile.4.) There are issues with the app. I had the schedule set up multiple times for daily cleaning, so it would kick off and run at the same times every day of the week. I really really liked that function, but it keeps resetting and shutting it off. So I no longer use it. I just open up the app and run the device when I want to. It also constantly resets the suction back to 1%, when I always have it set to 100% when I run it. I don’t know if this is happening when the device dies completely, or when it loses Wi-Fi connection, but it is a huge inconvenience that the app cannot save the changes globally and communicate that to the device again. The app definitely needs work.5.) I’m having issues now with it dying on the dock, or it not really connecting to the dock. This is a work in progress and I’m not sure what’s happening here. Like just now I was ready to run it in the kitchen on the vacuum setting, so that, after a quick recharge, I could mop the kitchen. And it had not charged at all overnight! So I picked it up and placed it back down and then it beeped and the play button lit up, so I knew it connected and was charging. I opened the app and it was dead! But it did that last night when I set it down, it beeped and gave the impression it was charging. So it’s not making sense why it’s not connecting, or it’s disconnecting in the middle of charging. Dang. Might have to use the warranty here. We’ll see how it goes. I just bought it last month!6.) I am a very cluttered person, and I knew that this purchase would help me clean up my act. The floor must be clear in order for this little guy to run. It has a small slit on the bottom where it pulls in the debris. And it has those iconic little spinning brushes that will spin the items up under it. So with that, there are many small items that will either get sucked up or caught in the brushes. Shoe laces or draw strings on pants will definitely get caught. Papers will definitely get rattled, and may be shredded. This may sound like a “duh” kind of statement, but just something to consider that it’s not ‘smart’ enough to sense those items and move away. It doesn’t seem to have a sensor and definitively no visible laser that’s looking ahead haha. It’s going to bump into an object and then move away from it. So if it’s an item that’s small enough to be run over, that’s exactly what’s going to happen. It’s not going to sense it and move away!I hope that helps. This device has a lot of rave reviews which is why I bought it, but it definitely has some issues. I’d like to believe it’s just my model and I got the short end of the stick! It seems like many consumers are happy with theirs.

  8. Si tu presupuesto es bajo y quieres una aspiradora robot es el producto ideal para ti. Relación costo- calidad es buena cumple con las funcione básicas, tienes que estar al pendiente de el recipiente de polvo sobretodo si tienes mascotas ya que se llena rápido pero en general es buena.

  9. I just start using it a few times. It works okay. The only place it could not pick up the dirts are corners and it will get entangled with the thick rug having loose threads at the rim.

  10. Realmente limpia bastante bien, si tienes mascotas no lo dudes, es de gran ayuda ponerlo a trabajar mientras uno realiza otras actividades. Es de las cosas que si vale la pena tener en la vida!

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