iRobot

Just moved into a new apartment with hardwood floors. Was thinking about getting a robot vacuum, but I was wondering how they did transitioning from hardwood to an area rug and back again. Do they bump into the edge of the rug and turn away? Are they able to climb over the edge?

We have a roomba. House is mostly hardwood with area carpets. No problem if we leave the carpets down, just rides up and over. Contrary to one of the previous posts, the corner brush works superbly. We use it in every room, including tile floor bathrooms and the kitchen. I can't believe how much stuff that thing picks up, even when the room looks "clean" before we start it.
 
Roomba 880 here. Works great and really does pick up a lot more dirt, dust, and hair than you'd really believe.

We have it set on a schedule to run every single day. It'll get lost and die in random places occasionally. But, its really no big deal. For the work it does in maintaining a clean floor, I don't mind.

I do have to go in and remove some long hair that can damage the internals but that only needs to happen every month or two.

We do need to bring out the big vacuum from time to time but I'm very happy with the work that this little robot can complete.

It handles the transition to wood and carpet transition without any issues.
 
Broke down and bought the Neato Botvac Connected D3. Our apartment is about 1,400 sq ft, and it takes a charge midway to get the whole place done and the robot is almost dead on his final return trip. Does that sound like "normal?" I figured he'd be able to do the whole apartment in one charge.
 
Broke down and bought the Neato Botvac Connected D3. Our apartment is about 1,400 sq ft, and it takes a charge midway to get the whole place done and the robot is almost dead on his final return trip. Does that sound like "normal?" I figured he'd be able to do the whole apartment in one charge.

Does that one have LiON batteries or NiCd? Seems a bit needy for a lithium battery... granted my Neato probably requires less power to run. If it's a NiCd... then it may need a few cycles to max out its capacity.
 
Broke down and bought the Neato Botvac Connected D3. Our apartment is about 1,400 sq ft, and it takes a charge midway to get the whole place done and the robot is almost dead on his final return trip. Does that sound like "normal?" I figured he'd be able to do the whole apartment in one charge.

Don't know about the new ones with lithium batteries like yours, but even the old style ones need to charge up sometimes. No big deal, they'll go three recharge cycles before they'll park for the day. Just set it to run when you're not home and it'll finish up, then empty dust bin when you get home.

The older NiCD batteries are only rated for about 240 cycles at the high discharge rate they're using. It's pretty high current. If the motors are drawing what the old ones are in yours, a recharge in 1400 sq feet wouldn't surprise me at all.
 
Shamelessly stolen from FB......

So, last week, something pretty tragic happened in our household. It's taken me until now to wrap my head around it and find the words to describe the horror. It started off simple enough - something that's probably happened to most of you.

Sometime between midnight and 1:30am, our puppy Evie pooped on our rug in the living room. This is the only time she's done this, so it's probably just because we forgot to let her out before we went to bed that night. Now, if you have a detective's mind, you may be wondering how we know the poop occurred between midnight and 1:30am. We were asleep, so how do I know that time frame?

Why, friends, that's because our Roomba runs at 1:30am every night, while we sleep. And it found the poop. And so begins the Pooptastrophe. The poohpocalypse. The pooppening.

If you have a Roomba, please rid yourself of all distractions and absorb everything I'm about to tell you.

Do not, under any circumstances, let your Roomba run over dog poop. If the unthinkable does happen, and your Roomba runs over dog poop, stop it immediately and do not let it continue the cleaning cycle. Because if that happens, it will spread the dog poop over every conceivable surface within its reach, resulting in a home that closely resembles a Jackson Pollock poop painting.

It will be on your floorboards. It will be on your furniture legs. It will be on your carpets. It will be on your rugs. It will be on your kids' toy boxes. If it's near the floor, it will have poop on it. Those awesome wheels, which have a checkered surface for better traction, left 25-foot poop trails all over the house. Our lovable Roomba, who gets a careful cleaning every night, looked like it had been mudding. Yes, mudding - like what you do with a Jeep on a pipeline road. But in poop.

Then, when your four-year-old gets up at 3am to crawl into your bed, you'll wonder why he smells like dog poop. And you'll walk into the living room. And you'll wonder why the floor feels slightly gritty. And you'll see a brown-encrusted, vaguely Roomba-shaped thing sitting in the middle of the floor with a glowing green light, like everything's okay. Like it's proud of itself. You were still half-asleep until this point, but now you wake up pretty damn quickly.

And then the horror. Oh the horror.

So, first you clean the child. You scrub the poop off his feet and put him back in bed. But you don't bother cleaning your own feet, because you know what's coming. It's inevitable, and it's coming at you like a freight train. Some folks would shrug their shoulders and get back in bed to deal with it in the morning. But you're not one of those people - you can't go to sleep with that war zone of poop in the living room.

So you clean the Roomba. You toss it in the bathtub to let it soak. You pull it apart, piece-by-piece, wondering at what point you became an adult and assumed responsibility for 3:30am-Roomba-disassembly-poop-cleanups. By this point, the poop isn't just on your hands - it's smeared up to your elbows. You already heard the Roomba make that "whirlllllllllllllllll-boop-hisssssssss" noise that sounds like electronics dying, and you realize you forgot to pull the battery before getting it wet.

Oh, and you're not just using profanity - you're inventing new types of profanity. You're saying things that would make Satan shudder in revulsion. You hope your kid stayed in bed, because if he hears you talking like this, there's no way he's not ending up in prison.

Then you get out the carpet shampooer. When you push it up to the rug - the rug that started it all - the shampooer just laughs at you. Because that rug is going in the trash, folks. But you shampoo it anyway, because your wife loved that damn rug, and you know she'll ask if you tried to clean it first.

Then you get out the paper towel rolls, idly wondering if you should invest in paper towel stock, and you blow through three or four rolls wiping up poop. Then you get the spray bottle with bleach water and hose down the floor boards to let them soak, because the poop has already dried. Then out comes the steam mop, and you take care of those 25-ft poop trails.

And then, because it's 6am, you go to bed. Let's finish this tomorrow, right?

The next day, you finish taking the Roomba apart, scraping out all the tiny flecks of poop, and after watching a few Youtube instructional videos, you remove the motherboard to wash it with a toothbrush. Then you bake it in the oven to dry. You put it all back together, and of course it doesn't work. Because you heard the "whirlllllllllllllll-boop-hissssssss" noise when it died its poopy death in the bathtub. But you hoped that maybe the Roomba gods would have mercy on you.

But there's a light at the end of the tunnel. After spending a week researching how to fix this damn £350 Roomba without spending £350 again - including refurb units, new motherboards, and new batteries - you finally decide to call the place where you bought it. That place called Hammacher Schlemmer. They have a funny name, but they have an awesome warranty. They claim it's for life, and it's for any reason.

So I called them and told the truth. My Roomba found dog poop and almost precipitated World War III.

And you know what they did? They offered to replace it. Yes, folks. They are replacing the Roomba that ran over dog poop and then died a poopy, watery death in the bathtub - by no fault of their own, of course.

So, mad props to Hammacher Schlemmer. If you're buying anything expensive, and they sell it, I recommend buying it from them. And remember - don't let your Roomba run over dog poop...
 
Necropost alert!!!

Anyone have any experience with the Samsung robotic vacuums?? I'm considering getting one. The big selling point for me is it's ability to know where it left off. I have roughly 3400' of floor space and the patterns of the Roomba/Neato products make it unlikely that they'll get it all.

So I finally bit the bullet and bought a Roomba 980. So far it seems to be doing the job. Took about 9 hours to do the inside of the house. Right now I have it in the workshop that's got a downright respectable layer of dust on the floor. It's going to town. Gonna set it loose in the hangar in few days after I finish hanging sheetrock in there.
 
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