logoalt Hacker News

ghafflast Monday at 2:00 AM3 repliesview on HN

My brother has a house that is pretty much custom-made for a robo-vacuum. One level, no transitions, they have pets. And they like it well enough (not an iRobot)--and it still gets tangled up in stuff from time to time.

I have a 2-level house. Even after some house work, one room that probably still has too high a transition. A lot of different surfaces (And I'm not religious with cords and the like.) I'm guessing that my house is a lot more typical of a lot of houses of any size that would justify an iRobot type of device.

Decided a few years ago that a broom vac just made a lot more sense.


Replies

bob1029last Monday at 10:10 AM

> custom-made for a robo-vacuum

If I was going to custom build a house around vacuuming, I'd get a central vacuum system, not a robotic one.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_vacuum_cleaner

show 1 reply
prawnlast Monday at 2:05 AM

A friend has a robot vac and just puts it in a room, closes the door, and leaves it for a couple of hours. Avoids the issue of worrying about which areas don't have kids' toys around, Lego, cords, etc. Higher touch than is ideal, but if you're already working from home and the kids are at school, it can work.

show 2 replies
maxglutelast Monday at 3:05 AM

Depends on your tolerance for filth (not a value judgement). You don't know how messy your enviroment is untih you see a robovac fill cannisters of shit each week. Having baseline for cleaniness helps with allergies. Like everything you can optmize for some big QoL gains, i.e. i basically just whip crumbs from surfaces straight to the floor knowing it'll get picked up. The solution for 2 level homes is 2 robovacs, cheap second hand, going to get disgusting anyways, replace filters and bristles. A few 100 dollars to have 80% clean floors is pretty life changing. Does not replace need for manual vaccing nooks and corners every once in a while.

show 3 replies