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I was excited by Roborockās announcements at CES 2024 that theyād be releasing a literal fleet of new robot vacuums this year and so far, they have not disappointed, releasing updates to their S8 and Qrevo lines. While the S8 Maxv Ultra ($1,499) remains my number one overall pick for top performing robot mop and vacuum, the Roborock Qrevo MaxV ($899.99) turns out to be a great lower priced model, with a few less features, but ideal for day to day cleanup.
Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop
$1,399.99 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$1,399.99 at Amazon
The unit itself is two parts: the base, which houses the vacuum bag, the clean water tank, dirty water tank, and the entire cleaning mechanism for the robot, and then the robot itself. The entire footprint of the tower is a little smaller than bots Iāve recently tested like the Ecovacs Deebot and the Eufy X10 and came in a gleaming white. The actual bot looks like its predecessors: Roborocks are round, with a protruding round ābuttonā on top. One of the reasons I enjoy this brand is the lids on their bots are magnetic, so they come off and on easily for cleaning or accessing the inside of the bot (which youāll really only need to do for setup and possibly, later, for maintenance).
One major differentiator between the S8 and Qrevo lines are the mop itself. The S8 line features a mop pad, while the Qrevo has spinning disk mopsāin this case, two of them on the backend of the bot. At the front are the rollers for the vacuum. The Qrevo has one roller and the S8 has two, but I havenāt found the number of rollers to correlate with the efficiency of vacuuming. If anything, the Qrevo was a little easier to unclog when something got caughtāaccessing the rollers just requires flipping the robot over, and then squeezing two clips to release the cover. I found the process easy compared to other robots like Roombas, where it was often hard to make the pieces fit back together. Roborock does a great job making the ends different enough that you always understand how to put things back together. The familiar rotating brush is also present, to help sweep debris into the robotās path, and it certainly seems larger than other bots, which should help get more debris closer to the wall. The water tanks each hold just over 4 liters of water. Over the two weeks I used the Qrevo on the highest setting, at least once daily, I didnāt need to refill the water tank, which was an improvement over the S8 Pro Ultra and all the other bots Iāve recently tested, but about the same as the S8 MaxV Ultra.
I found the Qrevo easy to unpack and install; something worth noting as I routinely install and uninstall these robots is that Roborock plans their packaging thoughtfully, and this tower required little more than attaching the docking ramp to the base, and it was ready to go. Installation was painless and took about ten minutes. Under the lid is a wifi indicator light; you load up the Roborock app, push two buttons on the robot itself to send the wifi into open mode, and the app located it within seconds. At that point, the app pushes some updates and wifi connections that are mostly hands off. I didnāt experience any disconnections during the time of testingāthe Roborock remained online the whole time. Notably, it came back online quickly after two power outages, which youāll know because it announces itself through the voice assistant, known as Rocky. (More on that in a bit.) Like other LiDAR-based robots, which use laser for guidance and mapping, the Qrevo mapped the entire space within seconds of leaving the dock, which will never fail to impress me. The map of your space is generated in the app, where you can manipulate it. On the first outing, you can choose whether to have the robot clean or just map, and I always recommend sticking to mapping so the robot is less likely to get stuck as it scopes out your space. While the LiDAR is immediate, the robot will still roam the space, almost confirming what the lasers saw.
Credit: Roborock
Once in cleaning mode, Roborock has expanded the previously available options to now include four levels of vacuuming and mopping intensity, and the brushes or mops will raise and lower based on the floor type detected below it. For those concerned about robots accidentally mopping your rugs, this is not something Iāve encountered being problematic on any model Iāve tested with LiDAR. Modern robots do an incredible job detecting floor textures, and the Qrevo is no different.
The Qrevo has 7000Pa of suction, which is substantially more than previous models, but less than the 10000Pa of the S8 Maxv Ultra. One of the ways these latest models are differentiating themselves is the sheer number of options available via the app to customize your vacuum experience, and here is where I think you can make or break your robot experience. Unlike iRobot, which is notorious for the inexplicable pattern the robot takes across your floor, Roborock allows you to choose the pattern, either back and forth or slightly more randomized. On top of the intensity, you can also choose if the bot should make one or two passes on the space. However, the setting that will likely affect your vacuum the most, I believe, is the obstacle avoidance. In this panel of settings, you can tell the robot you have a pet, which means it will detect both the pet and said petās poop. There is a āless collisionā mode, that means the bot will try to foresee walls and furniture so itāll bump into them less, and AI Environment recognition and obstacle avoidance. With the pet details and collision modes on, the floor simply wasnāt as well-cleaned, but turning them off improved effectiveness. I quickly realized that keeping the robot set at max suction and the back and forth pattern resulted in such a dramatically cleaner floor there was no reason to reduce the settings.
The Qrevo didnāt absorb the fluff from inside stuffed pet toys the way the S8 didāand that's something I'm often battling, so Iād need to remove it manually with some frequency. A note of appreciation for the brand is that the roller being stuck on debris does not render the bot immobileāyou can still return it to the base so itāll reveal itself for easy grabbing, or use the remote control in the app to direct it to you. You can generally tell when the bot has something in it, because it will rattle or sound off, but again, I appreciate it will keep trucking along anyway. The vacuum is definitely the better of the two modes; the Qrevo did an impressive job on deep pile carpets, low pile rugs, tile and wood floors, and it has a sizable enough container on board that it rarely had to return to the base mid-vacuum to empty itself. The base got an upgrade on power, too. This is important as it determines how well the base pulls all the debris out of the bot.
Dreame L40 Ultra Robot Vacuum and Mop
$1,499.99 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$1,499.99 at Amazon
Switchbot K10+ Pro Robot Vacuum
$599.99 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$599.99 at Amazon
SEE -1 MORE
Roborock's Revo line uses AI in combination with the cameras on board to look at the debris in front of it and make judgements about how to deal with it, at what level. This is the Intelligent Dirt Detection feature, and as vacuuming went, it worked pretty well. I was impressed with the Qrevo as a daily vacuum.
I am impressed with how effective newer bots with a mop pad are at getting the floor clean with just a pad, but the Qrevo features two beefy spinning brushes. While they provided an admirable clean, it wasnāt as effective as the S8 line in deep cleaning. It got rid of muddy paw prints, a spilled drink, and other big messes effectively, but did not give the deep scrub Iād hoped for on my white tile. In that way, these mops are good for everyday maintenance, but youāll still need to go in for a weekly deep clean with something manual. What I did like was the way the spinning brushes extended out from the body of the bot to get right up to the wall and around obstacles. It is the best mop for wall-to-wall coverage that Iāve tested and did a great job under toe kicks in my kitchen, a notoriously tough spot to get really clean. Like other bots, it struggles with inside corners, so those will be part of your weekly manual cleanup. The Qrevo gives you an additional layer of setting tools as well, and in some cases, they helped. For instance, with the mop on the highest intensity, you can even adjust how much water is used to make it even more effective. You wouldnāt want to leave it on high water use all the time, but I did find it was helpful for more stubborn spots on the tile and wood.
While the Roborock app offers a substantial amount of settings, it was still relatively easy to find what I needed, and to affect the settings I wanted. In particular, the mapping options remain one of the best experiences out there. You can easily split spaces, merge them, create zones on the fly, or tell the app where floors or furniture change or are present, if the LiDAR got it wrong. Like other newer machines, this model offers remote viewing, which is just an onboard camera that lets you watch live video from the robot. This is mostly helpful if the robot is stuck somewhere or you want to monitor how well itās cleaningāa few robots now offer this option and I struggle to find the necessity.
The most delightful new feature, if not fully cooked, was the voice assistant named Rocky onboard the robot. It lacks some of the flexibility of other assistants like Google and Alexaāyou can only summon it with āHello Rocky,ā and if you have more than one robot in the house, youāll do a lot of whispering to get the attention of the right one, since the app wonāt let you differentiate them. Once you have its attention, you can issue Rocky a very specific set of commands, like āstart cleaning,ā clean a specific room, or my favorite, āclean here,ā which will then try to locate your voice. Spoiler: It wasnāt great at this, but it was charming watching Rocky try. I assume Rocky will improve and Roborock will issue updates over time, and it was useful to be able to ask the robot to clean areas on the fly if you can remember the very specific wording of the command. Siri would use AI to try to understand if you meant "start cleaningā when you said āclean now,ā but Rocky doesnāt yet.
Overall I was happy with the Qrevo MaxV. While I maintain that even the best robot is a maintenance tool rather than a complete vacuum/mopping solution, this model delivered on that premise. When the settings were dialed in, I got good coverage and great vacuuming from wall to wall, though I did have to clear the vacuum rollers occasionally. The mop is great for surface-cleaning, particularly to the edge of walls, but isnāt for deep cleaning, and may require more passes and adjusting the setting occasionally to get it right. Rocky, as an AI assistant is a fun addition that I look forward to future developments with. At $999, the Qrevo MaxV is still an expensive machine, but seems worth the value comparatively to other robots.
Full story here:
I was excited by Roborockās announcements at CES 2024 that theyād be releasing a literal fleet of new robot vacuums this year and so far, they have not disappointed, releasing updates to their S8 and Qrevo lines. While the S8 Maxv Ultra ($1,499) remains my number one overall pick for top performing robot mop and vacuum, the Roborock Qrevo MaxV ($899.99) turns out to be a great lower priced model, with a few less features, but ideal for day to day cleanup.
Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop
$1,399.99 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$1,399.99 at Amazon
New extending brushes offer more reach
The unit itself is two parts: the base, which houses the vacuum bag, the clean water tank, dirty water tank, and the entire cleaning mechanism for the robot, and then the robot itself. The entire footprint of the tower is a little smaller than bots Iāve recently tested like the Ecovacs Deebot and the Eufy X10 and came in a gleaming white. The actual bot looks like its predecessors: Roborocks are round, with a protruding round ābuttonā on top. One of the reasons I enjoy this brand is the lids on their bots are magnetic, so they come off and on easily for cleaning or accessing the inside of the bot (which youāll really only need to do for setup and possibly, later, for maintenance).
One major differentiator between the S8 and Qrevo lines are the mop itself. The S8 line features a mop pad, while the Qrevo has spinning disk mopsāin this case, two of them on the backend of the bot. At the front are the rollers for the vacuum. The Qrevo has one roller and the S8 has two, but I havenāt found the number of rollers to correlate with the efficiency of vacuuming. If anything, the Qrevo was a little easier to unclog when something got caughtāaccessing the rollers just requires flipping the robot over, and then squeezing two clips to release the cover. I found the process easy compared to other robots like Roombas, where it was often hard to make the pieces fit back together. Roborock does a great job making the ends different enough that you always understand how to put things back together. The familiar rotating brush is also present, to help sweep debris into the robotās path, and it certainly seems larger than other bots, which should help get more debris closer to the wall. The water tanks each hold just over 4 liters of water. Over the two weeks I used the Qrevo on the highest setting, at least once daily, I didnāt need to refill the water tank, which was an improvement over the S8 Pro Ultra and all the other bots Iāve recently tested, but about the same as the S8 MaxV Ultra.
Easy installation and mapping
I found the Qrevo easy to unpack and install; something worth noting as I routinely install and uninstall these robots is that Roborock plans their packaging thoughtfully, and this tower required little more than attaching the docking ramp to the base, and it was ready to go. Installation was painless and took about ten minutes. Under the lid is a wifi indicator light; you load up the Roborock app, push two buttons on the robot itself to send the wifi into open mode, and the app located it within seconds. At that point, the app pushes some updates and wifi connections that are mostly hands off. I didnāt experience any disconnections during the time of testingāthe Roborock remained online the whole time. Notably, it came back online quickly after two power outages, which youāll know because it announces itself through the voice assistant, known as Rocky. (More on that in a bit.) Like other LiDAR-based robots, which use laser for guidance and mapping, the Qrevo mapped the entire space within seconds of leaving the dock, which will never fail to impress me. The map of your space is generated in the app, where you can manipulate it. On the first outing, you can choose whether to have the robot clean or just map, and I always recommend sticking to mapping so the robot is less likely to get stuck as it scopes out your space. While the LiDAR is immediate, the robot will still roam the space, almost confirming what the lasers saw.
Credit: Roborock
Customizable settings
Once in cleaning mode, Roborock has expanded the previously available options to now include four levels of vacuuming and mopping intensity, and the brushes or mops will raise and lower based on the floor type detected below it. For those concerned about robots accidentally mopping your rugs, this is not something Iāve encountered being problematic on any model Iāve tested with LiDAR. Modern robots do an incredible job detecting floor textures, and the Qrevo is no different.
The Qrevo has 7000Pa of suction, which is substantially more than previous models, but less than the 10000Pa of the S8 Maxv Ultra. One of the ways these latest models are differentiating themselves is the sheer number of options available via the app to customize your vacuum experience, and here is where I think you can make or break your robot experience. Unlike iRobot, which is notorious for the inexplicable pattern the robot takes across your floor, Roborock allows you to choose the pattern, either back and forth or slightly more randomized. On top of the intensity, you can also choose if the bot should make one or two passes on the space. However, the setting that will likely affect your vacuum the most, I believe, is the obstacle avoidance. In this panel of settings, you can tell the robot you have a pet, which means it will detect both the pet and said petās poop. There is a āless collisionā mode, that means the bot will try to foresee walls and furniture so itāll bump into them less, and AI Environment recognition and obstacle avoidance. With the pet details and collision modes on, the floor simply wasnāt as well-cleaned, but turning them off improved effectiveness. I quickly realized that keeping the robot set at max suction and the back and forth pattern resulted in such a dramatically cleaner floor there was no reason to reduce the settings.
The Qrevo didnāt absorb the fluff from inside stuffed pet toys the way the S8 didāand that's something I'm often battling, so Iād need to remove it manually with some frequency. A note of appreciation for the brand is that the roller being stuck on debris does not render the bot immobileāyou can still return it to the base so itāll reveal itself for easy grabbing, or use the remote control in the app to direct it to you. You can generally tell when the bot has something in it, because it will rattle or sound off, but again, I appreciate it will keep trucking along anyway. The vacuum is definitely the better of the two modes; the Qrevo did an impressive job on deep pile carpets, low pile rugs, tile and wood floors, and it has a sizable enough container on board that it rarely had to return to the base mid-vacuum to empty itself. The base got an upgrade on power, too. This is important as it determines how well the base pulls all the debris out of the bot.
Other robot vacuums to consider:
Dreame L40 Ultra Robot Vacuum and Mop
$1,499.99 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$1,499.99 at Amazon
Switchbot K10+ Pro Robot Vacuum
$599.99 at Amazon
Shop Now
Shop Now
$599.99 at Amazon
SEE -1 MORE
Roborock AI offers Intelligent Dirt Detection
Roborock's Revo line uses AI in combination with the cameras on board to look at the debris in front of it and make judgements about how to deal with it, at what level. This is the Intelligent Dirt Detection feature, and as vacuuming went, it worked pretty well. I was impressed with the Qrevo as a daily vacuum.
A good mop for daily cleaning
I am impressed with how effective newer bots with a mop pad are at getting the floor clean with just a pad, but the Qrevo features two beefy spinning brushes. While they provided an admirable clean, it wasnāt as effective as the S8 line in deep cleaning. It got rid of muddy paw prints, a spilled drink, and other big messes effectively, but did not give the deep scrub Iād hoped for on my white tile. In that way, these mops are good for everyday maintenance, but youāll still need to go in for a weekly deep clean with something manual. What I did like was the way the spinning brushes extended out from the body of the bot to get right up to the wall and around obstacles. It is the best mop for wall-to-wall coverage that Iāve tested and did a great job under toe kicks in my kitchen, a notoriously tough spot to get really clean. Like other bots, it struggles with inside corners, so those will be part of your weekly manual cleanup. The Qrevo gives you an additional layer of setting tools as well, and in some cases, they helped. For instance, with the mop on the highest intensity, you can even adjust how much water is used to make it even more effective. You wouldnāt want to leave it on high water use all the time, but I did find it was helpful for more stubborn spots on the tile and wood.
An app with several different settings
While the Roborock app offers a substantial amount of settings, it was still relatively easy to find what I needed, and to affect the settings I wanted. In particular, the mapping options remain one of the best experiences out there. You can easily split spaces, merge them, create zones on the fly, or tell the app where floors or furniture change or are present, if the LiDAR got it wrong. Like other newer machines, this model offers remote viewing, which is just an onboard camera that lets you watch live video from the robot. This is mostly helpful if the robot is stuck somewhere or you want to monitor how well itās cleaningāa few robots now offer this option and I struggle to find the necessity.
An onboard voice assistant needs more time to bake
The most delightful new feature, if not fully cooked, was the voice assistant named Rocky onboard the robot. It lacks some of the flexibility of other assistants like Google and Alexaāyou can only summon it with āHello Rocky,ā and if you have more than one robot in the house, youāll do a lot of whispering to get the attention of the right one, since the app wonāt let you differentiate them. Once you have its attention, you can issue Rocky a very specific set of commands, like āstart cleaning,ā clean a specific room, or my favorite, āclean here,ā which will then try to locate your voice. Spoiler: It wasnāt great at this, but it was charming watching Rocky try. I assume Rocky will improve and Roborock will issue updates over time, and it was useful to be able to ask the robot to clean areas on the fly if you can remember the very specific wording of the command. Siri would use AI to try to understand if you meant "start cleaningā when you said āclean now,ā but Rocky doesnāt yet.
Overall I was happy with the Qrevo MaxV. While I maintain that even the best robot is a maintenance tool rather than a complete vacuum/mopping solution, this model delivered on that premise. When the settings were dialed in, I got good coverage and great vacuuming from wall to wall, though I did have to clear the vacuum rollers occasionally. The mop is great for surface-cleaning, particularly to the edge of walls, but isnāt for deep cleaning, and may require more passes and adjusting the setting occasionally to get it right. Rocky, as an AI assistant is a fun addition that I look forward to future developments with. At $999, the Qrevo MaxV is still an expensive machine, but seems worth the value comparatively to other robots.
Full story here: