Mowing the lawn is one of those home ownership chores that sounds fun and wholesome before quickly becoming a burden. Luckily, smart inventors looked at robot vacuums and thought, “What if we gave them knives?” And thus, the robot lawnmower was born. Lymow is now rolling out the Lymow One, so larger tracts of land with rougher terrain can enjoy robot lawnmowing, too!
The Lymow One stands out versus other mowers in a few ways. One, they’re using professional-grade mulching blades like the ones in riding mowers, and they have a 16″ cutting width for a nice wide swath. More width equals fewer passes through the yard needed. There’s also a high-speed fan discharge to distribute the lawn clippings properly.
You also don’t need to worry about your Lymow One Robotic Mower going on a massacre of the neighbors’ lawns. They’re using RTK-VSLAM technology to let you virtually map your lawn’s boundaries. RTK works on satellites, so the VSLAM system helps to make sure trees or cloud cover don’t cause your mower to go rogue.
You can even make your Lymow One run in checkerboard or diamond grid patterns so your lawns won’t have zigzag lines.
The Lymow One Robotic Mower has a camera on board to identify small animals, sprinkler systems, and pet waste. You don’t want the lawnmower to meet any of those unsupervised.
And if your lawn is not the flattest, that’s okay. Lymow One uses a treaded propulsion system to clear obstacles up to 2′ in height and up to 45 degrees of gradient. It also has an IPX6 waterproof rating, so you don’t need to worry if the lawnmower gets caught in the rain.
Great inventions to help our lives easier. As long as they aern’t constantly beeping like those Sam’s Club or BJ’s automated robots that roam around for God knows why and beep and say uhoh type of thing. A bit annoying.
What is so cool is Lymow One can run in checkerboard or diamond grid patterns so your lawns won’t have zigzag lines.
The picture of this with the blades raised looks scary.
Love the on-board camera to identify animals, sprinkler systems, and other things to avoid mowing over 🙂