The Citizen (Gauteng)

And the Legee enters the fray

‘AIR HEADS’ TO BOOT: MORE ROBO CLEANERS HERE

- Arthur Goldstuck

This product stands out for its mapping of spaces.

As the robot vacuum cleaner market hots up, Hobot’s Legee, the big competitor to Roomba, is worth a test.

What is it?

It’s just two months since we tested the Roomba robot vacuum cleaner from iRobot, and it already seems one can’t move for bumping into robotic assistants.

This means that alternativ­es to the market leader must offer either better pricing, or more useful features.

South Africa has seen two options that more than meet the first criterion, and battle for attention on the second. Both Hobot and Xiaomi robot cleaners are available locally, with each in turn halving the asking price set by the one before.

That means the equivalent of the Roomba i7+, which retails for R15 999, will cost around R8 000 from Hobot and R3 900 from Xiaomi.

We tried the Hobot option, the Legee 7, described as a Mop 4-in1, due in South Africa this month. Its main selling point is that it offers a combinatio­n of two robotic cleaning appliances, namely mop and vacuum cleaner, managed via a Wi-Fi-connected app, which incorporat­es a scheduler and real-time map. The map, in turn, includes features that speak for themselves: Map Memory, Room Divider and Virtual Barrier.

The app can be installed on both Android and Apple smartphone­s, and can be controlled by voice through Google Assistant and Siri. The mapping and moving around of objects is made possible by a combinatio­n of LDS Lidar, gyroscope,

R8 000 is the cost of the Hobot robot vacuum cleaner

an e-compass and a tool called Position Estimation to detect and measure surroundin­gs.

All of that is impressive, but much of it is becoming pretty standard.

The Legee 7 stood out for two capabiliti­es: superb automatic mapping of the spaces being cleaned, across multiple rooms, and seven specialise­d cleaning modes, when gentle vacuuming is not enough. These include Polish Mode, Dry Mode for hardwood floors, Strong Mode for deep cleaning, and Pet Mode for cleaning hair and paw-prints.

Its “Talent Clean” feature combines the mapping and cleaning modes, allowing one to specify different cleaning modes for different rooms.

The Talent Clean mode can also be adjusted to account for the changing condition of a room that is already mapped. The Legee can memorise 7 maps for different rooms. Scheduling allows one to allocate tasks by both day of the week and time of day.

A virtual barrier, which draws an invisible line that the device may not cross, is a nifty feature, but it’s probably easier placing a physical barrier in the way, like, you know, closing a door? To be fair, it’s useful for keeping the bot away from kids’ toys – or even the kids themselves – occupying specific floor space.

Does it work? The Legee 7 is especially adept at finding its way around furniture, for example cleaning efficientl­y around the legs of chairs in an office. It is superb for fine particles like animal hairs, for example, not so much for small objects that get tangled in carpets.

Even Strong Mode could not cope with bits of packaging material that came with a particular­ly eco-unfriendly parcel delivery.

The default voice, which sounds like a a high-pitched robotic child, can become deeply irritating (“Legee go home” in that voice is cute only so many times), but thankfully can be replaced with a voice of choice.

The feature that constantly impresses is Legee’s ability to assess whether it has completed its task, and taking itself back to its base station, where it recharges its battery.

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Pictures: Supplied/iStock

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