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I’m going to start out by saying you do not need the Roborock S7 MaxV Ultra. But you are going to want it. No one really needs a $1,400 robot that cleans and mops their floors; humans have been doing this basic chore for centuries with no problems. But, put it this way: if the wicked stepmother had one of these gadgets, Cinderella would have been a completely different story.
The $1,399.99 S7 MaxV Ultra stands out from the competition for four main reasons. Alongside being a stellar vacuum robot, it can mop very well, thanks to a sonic action that scrubs the floor. It is also good at avoiding random junk on the floor (yes, including dog poop), and it will lift its mop pad up when it goes over carpet or rugs, so your Afghan won’t get wet. Finally, it not only empties its own bin but can refill its own water tank and clean the mopping pad, promising almost two months of hands-free operation.
GOOD STUFF
Almost autonomous
Excellent hardwood floor cleaning
Superb obstacle avoidance
Doubles as a security camera
Works with Amazon Alexa, Google Home, and Siri Shortcuts
BAD STUFF
Very expensive
Big and ugly
Water tank gets stinky
Not great on carpet
The S7 MaxV costs $859.99 for the robot alone or $1,399.99 for the S7 MaxV Ultra package. The Ultra moniker adds the innovative and descriptively named Empty Wash Fill dock, slated for release on May 2nd. The S7 MaxV also works with Roborock’s existing Auto Empty Dock for a combined price of $1,159.99. Each dock can be bought separately; $599.99 for the Empty Wash Fill Dock and $299.99 for the Auto-Empty Dock
The obstacle avoidance technology, which uses an onboard camera, light, and an AI chip, also adds the capability for the robot to identify furniture — so you can do a quick clean around the dining room table, for example.
Plus, with a livestreaming camera onboard, you have an on-demand home surveillance option with two-way talk built-in, should you want it. It’s an optional feature, not on by default, and is livestream only — there’s no recording. There are also various safeguards in place to turn on the monitoring and while in use — including loudly announcing the fact that “remote viewing” is enabled as it trundles around.
The S7 MaxV packs 5100pa of suction power, close to double that of the S7. It has a 400 ml dust bin and a 200 ml water tank (smaller than the S7), but if you get it with the Empty Wash Fill dock, those sizes don’t matter as much. A 5,200mAh battery delivers around three hours of runtime, depending on which settings you use, and it will take about six hours to charge up fully.
The Empty Wash Fill dock takes care of almost all the dirty work for you, although while Roborock says it can go 60 days without attendance, I managed to drain the fresh water tank in seven days of use. Based on the smell in the dirty water tank by that point, I would highly recommend cleaning this out regularly. The other frequent maintenance you’ll need to do is cleaning out the mop rinsing area in the base of the dock — it got nasty in there quickly. While this is a lot less fuss than you find with most robot/mop vacuums, it means this is almost autonomous, not fully autonomous.
SMART HOME DATA PRIVACY: ROBOROCK
Bringing connected devices into your home also brings with it concerns about how the data they collect is protected. The Verge asks each company whose smart home products we review about safeguards it has in place for your data.
The primary home data a robot vacuum like the Roborock S7 MaxV manages are the maps it generates and video and image data from its onboard camera. Roborock says that all map / cleaning data is encrypted before being sent to the cloud. Additionally, it says data only leaves the device if you view the map on its smartphone app. Otherwise, it stays locally on the device.
The company says a maximum of 20 cleaning maps are stored at any one time and any maps stored in the cloud are deleted after one year. A factory reset of the robot will remove any locally-stored map information.
The remote viewing and obstacle photo features are optional, not enabled by default, and can be turned off in the app. Remote viewing is live-streaming only (no video is recorded or stored). Photos of obstacles are encrypted and stored on the robot vacuum and only sent to the cloud if you click on an icon in the app to view the image. During this process it’s secured with Transport Layer Security.