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The Navimow i110N robot lawn mower might just replace your landscapers

My uncle recently found himself in a bit of a pickle with a knee surgery keeping him from mowing the lawn and his son back at school unable to help. As a former landscaper, he couldn’t stomach the thought of paying $60 per week for a local crew to cut his yard. They’ve proven time and time again to rush and miss corners. Lucky for him, I had the Segaway Navimow Series robot lawn mower in for testing.

The Segway Navimow i110N has a 7-inch disc blade that’s a third of the size of the 21-inch blade on his beloved electric Ryobi mower. As expected, he didn’t have much faith in a robot lawn mower. But for a guy who is disgustingly particular about his lawn, the I-Series impressed him with its accuracy and depth of environmental awareness. This man was straight-up giddy at points during the first cut—blown away by how it navigated back to touch up missed spots. Here’s what we liked and didn’t about the newest Navimow.

What I like

Easy to setup and use

(Image credit: Future)

The Navimow’s setup process is painless: I had it up and running in under 10 minutes. All you have to do is drop its compact dock into a corner of your yard, stick the included antenna into the ground nearby, and run the power cable to your outdoor receptacle. The Navimow app makes it easy to find the mower over Bluetooth and then connects it to your Wi-Fi network once you enter its password. From here, you just need to create a map by driving the mower around your yard’s boundary like a drone with touchscreen controls.

Sharp accuracy with thorough cuts

Navimow i110 navigates front lawn

(Image credit: Future)

I was most impressed by how accurately the GPS and camera sensor worked together to keep the mower riding along the edges of curbs and flower beds without falling over. It trimmed up to the border so well that we didn’t need to fish out a weed whacker to get edges that even humans miss. Once the bot works around the perimeter, it cuts the large interior portions downward in a diagonal row pattern for clean, defined strips. Grass is cut up incredibly fine without leaving any clumps on the lawn—something my uncle’s usual Ryobi mulching blade struggles with.


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