Once reliant on Xiaomi's Mi Home app, Roborock's recently launched is full of everything you need to use that amazing new robot vacuum from the company. Right now, Roborock's new app works with all of Roborock's latest robot vacuums, and the company is working to deliver updates to its older vacuums to expand compatibility for this new app. If you're using an older Roborock vacuum, the Mi Home app experience remains unchanged but, if you've picked up one of Roborock's 2019 or later vacuums, here's what you can expect to find in that shiny new app.
What's in a map?
If you happen to have more than one Roborock robot that supports the new app, a listing of all connected bots will appear first and foremost when it's opened. Once you've decided which robot vacuum will be doing the cleaning today, you'll be greeted with a map of your home, assuming that the robot vacuum has already made its way around your home once and mapped the whole thing.
Just about everything can be done from this main screen, including zone cleaning, per-room cleaning, or a whole-home cleaning. At the bottom, you'll find two large buttons: "Clean" for performing a whole-home cleaning run, and the button on the left will return the vacuum to the dock and end the current job. Cleaning individual rooms or zones in your home can be done by clicking on the tabs just above the main blue buttons at the bottom, clearly labeled "room" and "zone".
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Further above that, situated to the left edge of the screen, is the button for editing the map. If you need to adjust the map for any reason at all, this is the section you're looking for. We detail how to do that below. The other main button here, this time on the right side of the screen, adjusts the suction level of your vacuum. The higher the suction, the better the vacuum will clean but it's going to make a fair amount of noise in turbo or max modes.
If you're just looking for a quiet evening run, give balanced or quiet modes a shot. For reference, the Roborock S6 provides the most powerful suction in max mode and yet also features the quietest motor in its class. That's a full 50% quieter than the previous generation Roborock S5 when in balanced or quiet modes.
Oops, I spilled it again
So you filled your cereal bowl up too much and now some Lucky Charms are all over the dining room floor. Keep on eating what's in your bowl but, in the meantime, open up the Roborock app and click on the "zone" tab at the bottom. A small rectangle appears in the middle of the map, which can be dragged to your current location and resized to fit perfectly around the area where some of your cereal now resides.
If you've also forgotten to clean up the crumbs from your breadsticks last night or the peas you tried to feed to the dog, you can also select that "1x" icon on the bottom left of the screen, which will toggle between one, two, or three passes in the highlighted zone. That'll ensure that every little bit gets cleaned up along the way, just in case a mess is too large for the vacuum to suck up the first time around.
But what if you need to clean the foyer and the bathroom, as well? You can easily add another zone to the cleaning cycle by pressing the "Add" button just below the "number of passes" button. There's no limit to the number of zones you can make, so if there are a bunch of little spots in the home that need to be cleaned, drop a few more zones in there and be on your merry way. Your Roborock vacuum will figure out how to get to each of these and clean them accordingly, docking to charge when it's through with the job.
You can also clean entire rooms at a time by navigating to the "Room" tab at the bottom and tapping on any number of rooms to clean. The Roborock app automatically sections off parts of your house into logical rooms, and Roborock has trained its AI to be able to intelligently identify these spaces with little user intervention. After selecting any rooms you want to clean, just hit the clean button at the bottom to initiate the sequence. Multiple passes aren't supported in per-room cleans, so you'll need to use the zone cleaning feature if you want the vacuum to hit an area more than once.
Divide it up
Once the vacuum has performed a full cleaning of your home, a map will appear and be split into logical rooms. While Roborock's software is very good at identifying the boundaries between rooms, sometimes you might want to logically adjust things for easier cleaning in the future. My home, for instance, is an open floor plan, and there are no full walls between the foyer, living room, dining room, and the kitchen.
For simple organizational reasons, it made sense for me to divide these rooms up a little further than was done automatically. To do this, click on the 'locations' button on the bottom left-hand side of the app (it looks like a location icon with a list below it), and click on 'Edit room'. From here, you can select an existing room and choose to either divide it into smaller sections or to combine two rooms. In my case, my bed initially tricked the robot into thinking the master bedroom was split into two. Clicking on these two sections and tapping merged brought them together at long last.
No-go zones, No-mop zones, and walls you can't see
Sometimes there are places in the home where the robot simply should not go. In my house, the underside of my entertainment hutch is a really bad place for a robot vacuum to go. Aside from the possibility of getting stuck (because it's an awkward height), there are lots of cables under there for my TV, surround sound, computer, and everything else packed inside. That's definitely something you don't want a robot vacuum messing up.
A quick click on that 'locations' icon on the bottom left, followed by the "no-go zone" option will allow you to draw a box around an area the vacuum shouldn't go. This red-filled box will then stay on your map until removed which, in the case of something like my entertainment hutch, likely won't ever change.
Sometimes you just need to temporarily keep the vacuum out of an entire section of the house, and that's what the 'Invisible wall' feature is for. Clicking on this option will place a red line on your map, which can then be resized, rotated, and moved to block off parts of the house. Don't want the vacuum cleaning near the baby's room while it's sleeping? Drop a line at the beginning of the hallway and your Roborock will act like the hallway doesn't even exist.
You can place any number or combination of no-go zones and invisible walls around the floorplan of your home within the Roborock app, and these won't be removed until you get rid of them. What's cool is that the app makes backups of all changes made, so if you make a mistake, all you'll have to do is click on 'Edit map' in that locations button on the main screen and you'll see all the changes made to the map over time, with the ability to restore any of these backups at any time.
If you've got a Roborock S5 Max, you'll even be able to denote 'No-mop zones' to keep the vacuum from erroneously mopping area rugs or rooms with carpet that have no transition strips. The Roborock S5 Max features an electronic mop attachment that can adjust the amount of water sent to the pad, including turning it off completely. A no-mop zone looks similar to a no-go zone but is a different color to avoid confusion. Just like a no-go zone, no-mop zones won't be removed until you manually delete them, and they won't activate unless that mop is attached to the robot.
Where did it go?
Trying to figure out what your Roborock has vacuumed in your home, or where it might currently be cleaning? A quick glance at the main screen will tell you. Right on the map, you'll see a small icon indicating your Roborock robot vacuum's current position in the home, as well as the position of the charging dock. As your Roborock roams the house in search of every spec of dirt it can find, it lays a virtual trail of breadcrumbs that can be easily viewed in the app.
This white trail will tell you exactly where the vacuum has been, the exact path it has taken and can alert you to any areas the vacuum might not have been able to get to. This makes it easier to move furniture or other obstacles around and perform a quick zone cleaning to get those hard-to-reach places behind furniture that typically get ignored during the hustle of daily life.
Get on a schedule
While manually running your vacuum is fine, scheduling a regular cleaning of your home is the best way to make sure your home stays clean. Clicking on the overflow buttons on the top right will bring you to the settings menu. From here, clicking 'Timer' will take you to the list of existing timers. When creating a new timer, you'll need to select a day and time to begin the schedule, as well as how often you want it to repeat.
The magic comes in the bottom two settings, which allow you to create timers for individual rooms and adjust the suction for those timers individually. For example, you may want to vacuum the bedrooms twice per week with the maximum suction setting, while the daily dining room vacuuming can be done at a balanced or quiet level so as not to disturb your morning or evening routines in the home.
For rooms that need routine mopping, the Roborock S5 Max has an additional water flow setting within the timer that allows for the adjustment of water flow to the mopping pad. You'll need to click the mopping pad onto the vacuum before these mopping schedules are run, but it adds additional areas of customization to an already robust system of scheduling, and it means that your floors can be mopped as well as vacuumed when you come home from work.
Shoo fly, don't bother me
Want to make sure your vacuum won't make a lot of noise at night or run any early-morning schedules? You can set a time to enable Do Not Disturb, and the vacuum will both ignore any schedules and won't utilize the on-board speaker for voice commands because, you know, sleeping in on the weekend is a priority and you don't want your vacuum waking you up prematurely.
Also nestled in here is your cleaning history, which will let you know how much space has been cleaned, total cleanups, and total time run. Every single cleaning run is logged and a map saved with the path taken, including the extensive information that will provide. This also ties in with the maintenance section, which will let you know when you need to replace the air filter, water tank filters, side brush, main brush, and even when to clean all the sensors to keep the vacuum in tip-top shape.
Unpack the best
It's pretty apparent by now that Roborock's app is quite a powerful extension of the robot vacuums it sells. In fact, if it weren't for the app, the vacuums themselves would be pretty standard fare since they would be missing all the functionality you'll find above. As it stands, the Roborock app brings Roborock's vacuums into a class of their own in many, many ways.
The best part is that Roborock has been good about updating its vacuums over the years and adding significant functionality over time, increasing the already phenomenal value of these vacuums. After all, who wants to upgrade their vacuum every year just to get great new features? No one, that's who.
Smart cleaning, smart price
Roborock S4
The name in value for robot vacuums
The Roborock S4 sets a new bar for value in the world of robot vacuums. With a millimeter-precise laser-guided navigation system, per-room cleaning, powerful suction, and epic battery life, the Roborock S4 will vacuum your home like no other robot vacuum you've used. It's also $100 off for Black Friday, with a sale that lasts a week long (Nov 25 to Dec 1)!
Clean all the things
Roborock S6
It vacuums. It mops. It does it all.
The Roborock S6 was the first vacuum to launch with Roborock's advanced new navigation routines and a brand new type of side brush that's not only more durable and more effective than previous designs, but it also can adjust speed automatically depending on where it's at in a room. On top of this, the Roborock S6 offers the highest suction power of any Roborock vacuum, all while being 50% quieter than the Roborock S5.
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