NO PERIMETER WIRE REQUIRED! the L60 Delux is a great high quality robot lawn mower from Ambrogio. For smaller lawns these really are great units. Review by Robot Lawn Mowers Australia www.robotlawnmowers.com.au
Thanks I appreciate the reply and apologise it was at the end of the video it became clear what this was indeed for. I have intention of contacting you guys to discuss my options as iam interested in this tech. However after much trolling thru the web I can’t really see anything that can drive to the lawn , mow it then return to a charger. They all seem to require wire guidance and even gps guidance seems rather limited for todays tech. I look forward to calling you guys to talk options.
Thanks Marty, there is a lot of new wire free tech heading our way in the next 12 months. Some look very promising, but all of the wire free models that are hitting the market have not totally solved the issues with gps shadowing. I am very keen to do my own testing and provide true tested in australia reviews for our viewers. It going to be a big year.
@@robotlawnmowersaustralia7913 Thanks shadowing not really an issue for me but I can see it an issue for some. I’m perplexed why gps navigation can’t be used to get to the lawn and then wire for the boundary. My issue is not the wire boundary on the lawn that is easy to install for me but the navigation for the return to the dock. I’m not keen on wires over concrete paths. Even the lawn one you Demonstrated whah not a gps Nav to a destination point in middle of lawn and a Bluetooth signal for docking similar to vacuum robots? Will look forward to see what comes this year
HI Rihanna, the Ambrogio L60 Delux will navigate in a random pattern and during the mow it will operate parallel to the wall or raised edge. The distance from the front of the robot mower to the blades is approximately 10cm, and from the sides is 5cm. So once the unit has completed the mow your uncut edge against the wall will be around 5-8cm. On all other edge types it will mow right to the edge. Thanks for your question.
Is this able to differentiate between yours and your neighbor’s yard without a fence? Is there a geofence that can be put in place? Or must there be some kind of barrier between yards?
Hi, you will need something for the sensors to sense between the yards. Some of our customers have installed a 30cm row of pavers between the yards. This works well and looks good too.
Hi Marty, thanks for the comment. I did mention a couple of minutes into the video that there is no installation or charger for the robot to return to. I agree that ideally robot mowers should be fully autonomous and have little to no interaction required by the user, but some customers have multiple small lawns and don’t mind having to manually put the robot one the lawn and start it.
Thanks a lot for this demonstration. I have an older version of this mower, about nine years old now. These little wheels for the drop sensors look very fragile. Won’t they break apart if the mower hits an object which lower than its bumpers? My old version uses metal springs instead of those tiny little wheels. But sometimes a spring breaks and it has to be renewed. I’m not sure if these little wheels are better (i.e. more durable) than these metal springs on the old model... What do you think about these little wheels? Is the L60 Deluxe worth upgrading?
Hi, The new wheels on these are very strong. The support leg is made of 3mm 316 Stainless Steel and the wheel is a strong plastic. So they are very strong and definitely work better than the older spring type. The machine also senses the current of the drive motors, so if a low obstacle does only hit the drop wheels then it will still sense this and reverse off. I have not had to repair any of these wheels so far so I believe they are much better and is well worth the upgrade. Thanks for you comments.
Hi Brice, it really depends on how long you are talking about. These mowers will cut long grass, but it is not the intention of the design of robot mower. They are designed to cut more frequently and cut small amounts at a time. There are some videos out there that show the robot mower cutting longer grass or in the case of the second link abusing the robot mower to show what it can actually do. This video gives a good idea of what it is designed to do - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-MCEU59uyLZU.html&feature=emb_rel_end This video show what it can do , but not designed to do. I do not recomend doing this to your robot mower! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VcfXLRNm0yg.html
I know! This was taken at my house and we rarely have crows hanging around. But as you can hear there were plenty of them around on this day to make filming very difficult. I will have a better microphone for the next video.