What determines the user comfort of robot vacuum cleaners?
In short
Smart | Operate the robot via an app on your mobile, at home or, for example, from the office. |
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Programmable | Set up a cleaning schedule for the rest of the week. On the robot or via the app. |
Area delimitation | Determine yourself which parts the robot does or does not vacuum. |
Remote-controlled | Control the robot with a remote or via the app. That way, you don't have to be next to the robot to control it. |
Collection capacity | The dust cup of a robot vacuum is relatively small. The larger it is, the longer the robot retains its suction power and the less often you have to empty the dust cup. |
User comfort top class
You buy high-end robot vacuums because you like to decide what and how the robot cleans. You prefer to do this via your phone. A robot vacuum with high-end user comfort has at least 70% of the specifications from the table listed above. These robots are distinguished by controls via the app and included area delimination. You can even change settings via your phone from work or the train with these high-end robots.
User comfort middle class
The robot vacuums with mid-range user comfort have at least 50% of the specifications from the table listed above. These robots are programmable for the week and smart if you're connected to WiFi at home, but they don't have area delimination. With a mid-range robot vacuum, you can still decide what and how the robot cleans for a large part. But, you can't do this at work via your phone.
Basic user comfort
Robot vacuums with basic user comfort have less than 50% of the specifications listed in the table above. These robots aren't programmable, can't be controlled via an app on your phone, and don't have area delimination. These robot vacuums are better affordable. Do you mostly value the suction performance of the robot, and don't you need many extras? A basic model is suitable for you.