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MAMMOTION LUBA AWD 5000, Perimeter Wire Free Robotic Lawn Mower for 1.25 Acres 75% Slope, APP Control with Virtual Boundaries, All-Wheel Drive, Multi-Zone Management, Low Noise Less Than 60 dB(A)

  • Based on 101 reviews
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Size: Mows up to 1.25 Acres


Style: All-wheel Drive Rubber Version


Features

  • QUICK SETUP WITH NO PERIMETER WIRES: No perimeter wire is needed to setup or repair anymore. With the App, you can set the virtual boundaries in cm-level accuracy positioning and map your lawn thanks to the advanced RTK-GNSS and Multi-Sensor Navigation System. LUBA leads the RTK signal range of covering a radius of 394ft (120m).
  • ALL-WHEEL DRIVE FOR 75% SLOPE(37): Featuring four powerful in-hub motors and exclusive off-road tires and suspensions, LUBA AWD 5000 automatic robot lawn mower boasts outstanding traction and zero-turning agility on complex lawn. Unlike small-diameter wheel mowers, the LUBA robot mower can effortlessly handle 75% slope (37) and traverse the most demanding terrain without getting stuck.
  • IN-APP MULTI-ZONE MANAGEMENT: With the Mammotion App, you can easily set up no-go-zone and mowing tasks for multiple working areas, and create channels between. Set different schedules, cutting modes and cutting heights of 1.18-2.8inch for each mowing zone. Enjoy your vacation and control your mower anywhere.
  • MOW LAWN UP TO 1.25 ACRES( 0.13 ACRE/H): The LUBA AWD 5000 robotic lawn mower features dual cutting plates and a 16-inch (400mm) cutting width, ensuring thorough grass cutting without any missed areas. Compared to the random mowing pattern of conventional robotic mowers, the planned route algorithm significantly improves Luba's mowing efficiency. It has a super high efficiency of mowing up to 0.13 acre (500m2) each hour, allowing your family to enjoying more time on picture-perfect lawn.
  • SAFETY AND THEFT PREVENTION: Four ultrasonic radar sensors allow the LUBA robot lawn mower to automatically detect and avoid obstacles with a Field of view (FOV) of 220 degrees. Equipped front bumper, lift and tilt blade-stop sensor and TuV Rheinland-certified Quality, LUBA automatic lawn mower robot can protect itself, ambient animals and your family. The theft prevention system protects LUBA AWD 5000 robot mower from potential theft.
  • PACKAGE INCLUDED: 1. Charging Station 2. LUBA AWD 5000 Robotic Lawn Mower 3. Power Supply 4. RTK Reference Station 5. RTK Reference Station Extension Cable(33 ft.) 6. RTK Reference Station Power Supply 7. Extra One Set Of Blade 8. Key 9. Installation Kits 10. Mounting Pole 11. Quick Start Guide 12. Mower Mat

Brand: Mammotion


Style: All-wheel Drive Rubber Version


Item Weight: 20 Kilograms


Cutting Width: 15.7 Inches


Operation Mode: Automatic


Product Dimensions: 27.56"D x 20.87"W x 9.84"H


Product Dimensions: 32.48 x 23.62 x 14.96 inches


Item Weight: 44 pounds


Manufacturer: Mammotion


Item model number: LUBA AWD 5000


Batteries: 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Frequently asked questions

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • An attempt at an objective review...
I'm going to attempt an objective review, and also to explain why there seem to be very diverse opinions on the Luba mower, from the perspective of someone who's had one running for about 10 weeks. 1) If you can't get a good GPS signal, at both the mower, and the RTK receiver (which is stationary), you are going to be disappointed. That's a lot of the negative reviews. The RTK receiver should be an easy fix--if you're serious about using this, you'll mount it on your roof (or somewhere high) with a clear view of the sky and centrally located in your mowing area. I'm mowing less than a half acre of grass, but it's spread out over an area that is more than 750 feet across from corner to corner, and I have no problem with the RTK communicating w/the Luba over that distance. I have it mounted on my roof, and line-of site from the furthest point (450 feet away). On the other side of the house, the furthest distance is 350 feet away, and the signal must pass through my house's roofline. I've never had an issue with Luba connecting to the RTK. The Luba itself is more challenging (obviously, since it moves around). I have quite a bit of tree cover around my yard, and particularly along my driveway. Once I properly positioned the RTK, I had no issues mapping the yard, and during the first run, there were only one or two areas along the edge where Luba got "lost" and could not recover. I was able to move my boundaries in a half a foot, and get good coverage in these areas. Also remember that GPS coverage is better at specific times of day, and depending upon interference (cloud cover, smoke from recent forest fires, etc.). Of course you don't want to plan your mowing around this, but I have started mowing the areas with the most tree cover when the skies are clearest. Finally, all the complaints about Luba not recovering itself well are SPOT ON. This is a big frustration, as it knows where it was, 3 feet before it lost GPS coverage...why not backtrack until it can find coverage again, vs. hoping to get coverage in it's new spot. I am hopeful that new software releases will focus on recovery in the field and docking -- the two areas that are most immature, imo. 2) The mowing is great. I have it mow almost constantly and in a precision "grid" pattern. I get great coverage, basically no missed spots, and it follows boundaries extremely well. Even if there are some docking issues (see below), I'm ok manually handling that for now, if there's hope of improvement. There are a few tricks, like turning off the obstacle avoidance when mowing high grass for the first time (and then running frequently enough to not have high grass). Also, if your lawn has any significant dips/holes or rocks, you need to level them out or create no-go zones...it handles slopes well (I have a significant one from front to back yard), but does not handle abrupt terrain shifts like a hole made by an animal. These don't typically stop the mower, but cause it to "go around"...which is the only time I see "missed spots". Of course, the solution is to do what you should be doing anyway -- fix your yard...fill holes, and level out the ground. I would love for it to FLAG these areas on the map after mowing (a suggesting I've made to Mammotion), so that I know what to address, vs. having to scan my lawn for issues. 3) Docking in the charging base is the most frustrating part for me, because that is required for the mower to truly operate autonomously on a lawn my size...it requires at least 2 charging stops to complete the lawn. Here are the biggest issues: a) The Luba must have high precision GPS coverage at the base, and this is often tricky near a wall/house. However, the base must also be powered, and nobody wants a base sitting in the middle of their lawn, let alone a power cord stretched out to it. If you can get 5 feet away from the house, it seems to do better (at least in my case), but for most people, that's now "in" your lawn. Also, the logical place to dock the Luba is often under a deck, or near a wall, behind your house...again, areas of poor GPS coverage. Now, we all understand why Luba must be able to find it's base, but here's the frustration: Luba actually uses infrared (or some other signal...I haven't actually scanned for what it is...but it's not reliant on GPS) to dock itself once it's close enough to the base...which seems to be about 10 feet away. So why can't I permanently locate my base somewhere within 10 feet of a strong GPS signal, and then have Luba go to that spot, and use the IR signal to dock? b) Similarly, Luba has a strange pattern of driving up to the base and then "circling" in order to back in...and the spot it chooses to "circle" in is not always ideal, particularly if there is any slope where it circles (the base must be flat...but in my yard, there is a modest slope where it chooses to turn around, before backing onto the flat base). This can cause it to spin for several minutes and then give up...when, if I could tell it to turn around further away, and then back up a foot or two further, it would have no problem docking (I know this because when I manually drive it into proper position, it docks itself easily in the same location). I am hopeful this is also a candidate for a software update -- but right now, I'm stuck manually docking it, which makes full automation impossible, as my yard requires at least one charge to complete. 4) Finally, the people who complain about feedback/support are right -- it is lacking. Most people who've bought in at this point would be fine waiting for some of these features/fixes, if they knew if, and when they were coming. There are regular patches coming out, but they don't seem to be feature releases, and there is no communication that addresses future releases or features. The irony is that their app actually has a lot of features to capture feedback and search for support...but it appears to go into a black hole. 5) Just be aware that the maximum cut height is 2.8". This works for me -- but my guess is that new versions will raise the deck. In my opinion the cutting range (about 2") is fine, but I'm not cutting putting greens...so a better bottom/top would be 2" - 4". I doubt there's an way to modify my Luba to do that...so worth considering if you cut at 3.5" and aren't willing to adjust. I give this 4 stars because it works amazingly well once setup, and I can see the potential for almost all of my concerns to be addressed via software. I'm willing to wait for that, but would love to see a more engaged company in terms of providing that feedback. Since Mammotion does appear to be doing a lot of business on Amazon and responding to questions here, I'm hoping a positive review that points out some of these challenges will get them to recognize what I think are common concerns of early adopters who really love their product. I am very happy with my purchase and recommend Luba to everyone I know with the caveats above -- but as an early adopter, I'd love for Mammotion to be more responsive with discussion of things like new feature releases -- particularly to their existing user base -- and think the best way for that to happen is for them to understand that lack of effective communication has a material impact on their sales. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2023 by ChrisC

  • Zone size is important
Luba 5000 was delivered June 15th the unit is effective. It does seem to get stuck alot, and does not resume well when the battery gets low. I do wish it remembered where it got stuck and added an exclusion after a few times. I also wish it were better at picking up where it left off. Performance on steep slopes is fair. It has plenty of power but the tires are only ok. update July 30: I'm growing irritated at the quality of the software. if the unit slips the slightest bit out of it's mowing range it doesn't try to return, it just stops. If it bumps into something and cannot proceed forward, it does not try to go around, it just stops. manual control only works via bluetooth so you need to walk up to the unit to recover it, you cannot do so from the window of your home. I cannot recommend this unit with it's current software. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2023 by Brian

  • Worth it to me
It's a pricey unit, no question. For the Texas 100+ heat it's worth it. Things to note. If you have questionable internet due to multiple items being on it in your house it will make getting everything setup that much harder. To me, the hardest part was selecting the correct location for the satellite receiver and the charging station. Both must be in open sky, for real. My charging station is just under the edge of a tree that has a tiny bit of shading. You do have to allow for 4' in front of the unit for it to do its own recharging and such. I used both an andriod app and an apple app and they seem to be pretty much the same now. It's a bit hard to tell as setting it up does have its issues. The biggest issue is the satellite reception. I am in the TX/DFW metroplex, plenty of satellite reception, however, it fails to make connection sometimes. PATIENCE is an absolute requirement. If you are Type A you are going to struggle with the amount of patience required. Is it worth it, YES! Once it's setup it's a beautiful situation. If/when it drops the satellite connection during setup or while its mowing, just accept it and leave it alone until it comes back online. This is where the patience comes in. If the app doesn't respond as it should, be patient, wait until it does. I have a reasonably complex yard for a medium sized yard, front, back and side. I have 6 zones setup to allow for 'parking' sections on two sides of the front yard. It hasn't fallen off the curb, but I can hardly stand to watch it because it's so close and makes me incredibly nervous as it would fall right into a main street. It does a really good job. I bought this one so I could eventually move it to a very hilly yard at a different house, but the current yard is flat, so I can't speak to how well it does on slopes. I am a bit suspicious as it slips on St. Augustine on a very tiny incline around a bush I have in the front. I wish I could confirm or deny the ability to manage a real slope. It is not perfect, but it's pretty great, once you get it set up. It is incredibly quiet. We have a bee box and bird feeders. Neither even notice it's running. I don't notice it if it's behind me. My suggestions, don't set it up on the 104 heat days, make sure your internet isn't overloaded and have patience. Pick a zone to work on. Odds are you are going to have to learn a few things the hard way so start with something not too big, not too complicated to do first so you won't get upset if you have to map it 6 times to get it right. After you get that one done and have done a trial mow, move on from there. Find the setting for 'tall grass' for first run. It's slow but incredibly rewarding to see it plow through the grass you ignored while you waited to get your mower delivered. Once it's setup, sit back and enjoy your new found free time. I did buy the reviewers suggested 'plastic window well' to serve as a garage to try and help give it some shade. That seems to be working great. If you have a robotic vacuum, don't expect the object avoidance or 'no go zones' on this mower to work as well as those do. It's not nearly that good, but It's a much heavier, bigger unit with 4 AWD tires, nothing like the vacuum that can turn at will to change direction. It doesn't detect my hose at all, runs right over it. I decided to make the zone end right next to my hose that runs across the side of my yard to my garden. That works out the same. My lawn has plenty of dips, ruts, holes... all over uneven ground. The mower handles it all in stride. You can see the 4 AWD working as one tire dips while another doesn't. After a couple of weeks of watching it like a toddler when it ran, I've settled into choosing zones and sending it off to mow only to check now and again. I've not used the scheduler yet. Even without the scheduler I'd be happy with it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2023 by DIY Southern Woman of a Certain Age

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