No Wires, No RTK, No Signal Issues: automatic robot lawn mower utilizes pure vision FSD technology with high-precision cameras and intelligent algorithms, eliminating the need for wires or an RTK station.
Hands-Free Auto Mapping: With precise positioning and distance measurement, effectively maps your yard and plans the mowing path, which can be easily viewed on your smartphone.
Accurate Obstacle Avoidance: 3D perception system accurately detects obstacles, ensuring it avoids collisions in complex garden environments.
Reliable Lawn Maintenance: Delivers beautiful, uniform parallel cutting. Its smart coverage detection system guarantees no area is left uncut.
Worry-Free Experience: Features GPS tracking to prevent theft. With easy app control and automatic recall during rainy or low-light conditions, it provides a seamless, worry-free experience.
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No Wires, No RTK, No Signal Issues: automatic robot lawn mower utilizes pure vision FSD technology with high-precision cameras and intelligent algorithms, eliminating the need for wires or an RTK station.
Hands-Free Auto Mapping: With precise positioning and distance measurement, effectively maps your yard and plans the mowing path, which can be easily viewed on your smartphone.
Accurate Obstacle Avoidance: 3D perception system accurately detects obstacles, ensuring it avoids collisions in complex garden environments.
Reliable Lawn Maintenance: Delivers beautiful, uniform parallel cutting. Its smart coverage detection system guarantees no area is left uncut.
Worry-Free Experience: Features GPS tracking to prevent theft. With easy app control and automatic recall during rainy or low-light conditions, it provides a seamless, worry-free experience.
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
***UPDATE*** A huge shout-out to fellow Slickdealer, "Stephen.", for bringing some serious health concerns to my attention. He respectfully asked questions about the practices I explained in my original comment that led me to read up on something that I, embarrassingly, knew nothing about. Please, do not use these mowers as a way to eliminate dog poop in your yard. I was unaware of the toxic, bacterial, and parasitic contaminates that I was potentially spreading around my entire backyard.***
Honestly, this has been one of the best surprises of having a robot mower for the last 4-5 years. I have an early model Husqvarna and it just bounces around the yard randomly. Nobody ever mentioned some of the perks that come along with these things back when I did a bunch of research but the first perk is that my dog's poop gets run over repeatedly which makes it break down extremely fast. I can actually tell if there is a fresh pile because anything older than a day has already been run over a couple of times (most likely). The other unforseen perk is just as great in that I live in Georgia (near Savannah) and if you have been to the South, you know that fire ants show up all over the place. I've tried all types of solutions to get rid of them but they are resilient and new colonies form overnight. Well, because ants are an extremely intelligent insect, they respond to their colonies being disturbed by swarming. Of course, by the time they get their ant hills run over and attempt to retaliate, Lawn Swanson (the name of my mower) has already gone on about his business somewhere else. Because he continues to run over these hills, the ants determine that it is not a safe environment to maintain a colony and leave. Having the mower run around the yard about half of the day cuts down on the fire ant population by about 90% in my yard and I'm very ok with that.
Stupid question, what stops someone from just picking it up and taking it with them? Im sure it has a tracker and all, but so do all the BMWs that are stolen on a regular basis every day.
Sorry for the delayed response. This has been a hectic week and I wanted to look into the questions you asked before blindly responding. I'll go ahead and start out by saying THANK YOU! I've been a pet owner all of my life and I'm shocked that I didn't know any of this information. You are exactly right about what you said. Not only can dog poop be toxic but some of the bacteria/parasites that can thrive in it can actually survive in your yard for days, weeks, months, or even years (which is wild to think about). Growing up, we always picked up dog piles in our yard. When we moved to the country, we just used a shovel and threw them into under a tree line. Nobody ever explained anything to me about toxicity and health concerns. There was always the obvious health concern of tracking dog poop in the house or getting it on you by leaving it in the yard but I figured that biomaterial being allowed to break down quickly allowed for a natural process to take place and not that I was exacerbating one toxic location by allowing it to be spread everywhere.
I'm going to update my original post in the hopes that folks who might read it can get the more well-informed perspective and not the ignorant one I originally put out there.
Again, thank you for bringing this to my attention. My family is moving into a brand new home in about 6-8 weeks and you have just saved me from polluting that entire yard. I really do appreciate the respectful way you asked these things and now I can only hope I didn't influence anyone else to use robot mowers in the same way that I have.
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Quote
from erikkol1234
:
I just need an automatic dog poop picker-upper as well so this doesn't fertilize my lawn in the process.
***UPDATE*** A huge shout-out to fellow Slickdealer, "Stephen.", for bringing some serious health concerns to my attention. He respectfully asked questions about the practices I explained in my original comment that led me to read up on something that I, embarrassingly, knew nothing about. Please, do not use these mowers as a way to eliminate dog poop in your yard. I was unaware of the toxic, bacterial, and parasitic contaminates that I was potentially spreading around my entire backyard.***
Honestly, this has been one of the best surprises of having a robot mower for the last 4-5 years. I have an early model Husqvarna and it just bounces around the yard randomly. Nobody ever mentioned some of the perks that come along with these things back when I did a bunch of research but the first perk is that my dog's poop gets run over repeatedly which makes it break down extremely fast. I can actually tell if there is a fresh pile because anything older than a day has already been run over a couple of times (most likely). The other unforseen perk is just as great in that I live in Georgia (near Savannah) and if you have been to the South, you know that fire ants show up all over the place. I've tried all types of solutions to get rid of them but they are resilient and new colonies form overnight. Well, because ants are an extremely intelligent insect, they respond to their colonies being disturbed by swarming. Of course, by the time they get their ant hills run over and attempt to retaliate, Lawn Swanson (the name of my mower) has already gone on about his business somewhere else. Because he continues to run over these hills, the ants determine that it is not a safe environment to maintain a colony and leave. Having the mower run around the yard about half of the day cuts down on the fire ant population by about 90% in my yard and I'm very ok with that.
Last edited by GeoffreyK24 February 12, 2026 at 12:40 PM.
I get lot of leaves from the trees around. How does this handle the yard with leaves?
Define, "a lot" lol. Honestly, it is best to keep the yard clear by raking or blowing it off but as long as you are expecting these to regularly take on pine cones and sticks, a very slow trickle of leaves will be mulched up over time. If we are talking about setting it down to begin using it with a yard covered in layers of leaves that have accumulated, it will probably mulch the fresh stuff but don't expect it to clear anything
Honestly, this has been one of the best surprises of having a robot mower for the last 4-5 years. I have an early model Husqvarna and it just bounces around the yard randomly. Nobody ever mentioned some of the perks that come along with these things back when I did a bunch of research but the first perk is that my dog's poop gets run over repeatedly which makes it break down extremely fast. I can actually tell if there is a fresh pile because anything older than a day has already been run over a couple of times (most likely). The other unforseen perk is just as great in that I live in Georgia (near Savannah) and if you have been to the South, you know that fire ants show up all over the place. I've tried all types of solutions to get rid of them but they are resilient and new colonies form overnight. Well, because ants are an extremely intelligent insect, they respond to their colonies being disturbed by swarming. Of course, by the time they get their ant hills run over and attempt to retaliate, Lawn Swanson (the name of my mower) has already gone on about his business somewhere else. Because he continues to run over these hills, the ants determine that it is not a safe environment to maintain a colony and leave. Having the mower run around the yard about half of the day cuts down on the fire ant population by about 90% in my yard and I'm very ok with that.
I'm a bit confused, you want the poop to be smushed and spread all over your mower? I thought it was unhealthy to have dog poop spread around your yard like that, and generally bad for the sewage system? Not trolling, asking legit questions because I would love to not have to worry about dog poop in my yard, but everything I've read is saying dog poop should be picked up and not mulched into the lawn.
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I didn't realize these robots don't need a buried line anymore, and can mow a pattern instead of random wandering. There's a better rated mower for $800 that does 0.4 acres on Amazon. No idea how it compares.
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Quote
from kgpolat
:
Can this stay in my garage and mow my front lawn by going through driveway?
I dont see why not... as long as you schedule your garage door to open when it goes for it's scheduled mow since i'm pretty sure this thing doesn't have a garage opener.
I didn't realize these robots don't need a buried line anymore, and can mow a pattern instead of random wandering. There's a better rated mower for $800 that does 0.4 acres on Amazon. No idea how it compares.
When did they need a buried line? I would think these have had GPS for a while now, since that tech has been so cheap for over two decades, and way cheaper than burying a line.
How long does recharge take? I have a 3 acre lawn, so could I program 10 different zones and have the entire lawn cut once every 10 days (or 5 days if recharge happens fast enough)?
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Feb 10, 2026 03:09 AM
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Honestly, this has been one of the best surprises of having a robot mower for the last 4-5 years. I have an early model Husqvarna and it just bounces around the yard randomly. Nobody ever mentioned some of the perks that come along with these things back when I did a bunch of research but the first perk is that my dog's poop gets run over repeatedly which makes it break down extremely fast. I can actually tell if there is a fresh pile because anything older than a day has already been run over a couple of times (most likely). The other unforseen perk is just as great in that I live in Georgia (near Savannah) and if you have been to the South, you know that fire ants show up all over the place. I've tried all types of solutions to get rid of them but they are resilient and new colonies form overnight. Well, because ants are an extremely intelligent insect, they respond to their colonies being disturbed by swarming. Of course, by the time they get their ant hills run over and attempt to retaliate, Lawn Swanson (the name of my mower) has already gone on about his business somewhere else. Because he continues to run over these hills, the ants determine that it is not a safe environment to maintain a colony and leave. Having the mower run around the yard about half of the day cuts down on the fire ant population by about 90% in my yard and I'm very ok with that.
I'm going to update my original post in the hopes that folks who might read it can get the more well-informed perspective and not the ignorant one I originally put out there.
Again, thank you for bringing this to my attention. My family is moving into a brand new home in about 6-8 weeks and you have just saved me from polluting that entire yard. I really do appreciate the respectful way you asked these things and now I can only hope I didn't influence anyone else to use robot mowers in the same way that I have.
100 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank GeoffreyK24
Honestly, this has been one of the best surprises of having a robot mower for the last 4-5 years. I have an early model Husqvarna and it just bounces around the yard randomly. Nobody ever mentioned some of the perks that come along with these things back when I did a bunch of research but the first perk is that my dog's poop gets run over repeatedly which makes it break down extremely fast. I can actually tell if there is a fresh pile because anything older than a day has already been run over a couple of times (most likely). The other unforseen perk is just as great in that I live in Georgia (near Savannah) and if you have been to the South, you know that fire ants show up all over the place. I've tried all types of solutions to get rid of them but they are resilient and new colonies form overnight. Well, because ants are an extremely intelligent insect, they respond to their colonies being disturbed by swarming. Of course, by the time they get their ant hills run over and attempt to retaliate, Lawn Swanson (the name of my mower) has already gone on about his business somewhere else. Because he continues to run over these hills, the ants determine that it is not a safe environment to maintain a colony and leave. Having the mower run around the yard about half of the day cuts down on the fire ant population by about 90% in my yard and I'm very ok with that.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank redpoint5
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Stephen.
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