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Installation Guide
This chapter explains how to install the Robotic Mower. Please read this completely before
you start the installation.
Introduction
We recommend creating a draft of your lawn, including all obstacles and how these should
be protected. This makes it easier to find a good position for the docking station and how to
correctly place the boundary wire around your garden perimeter protecting bushes, flower
beds etc. You will also need some tools, like a hammer and wire cutters, pliers or scissors.
Cutting limitations
The Robotic Mower is equipped with collision sensors. These will detect any rigid
and fixed obstacles higher than 100 mm, such as walls, fences and garden furniture.
When triggered, the Robotic Mower will stop, reverse backwards and then continue
mowing in a different direction. Still, protecting the obstacles using the boundary wire is the
recommended long-term solution.
> 100 mm
Trees
The Robotic Mower treats trees as common obstacles, but if the roots of the tree are exposed
and lower than 100mm, this area should be excluded using boundary wire in order to protect
the tree root, cutting blades or rear wheels from damage.
Stones
We recommend clearing the lawn of small (less than 100 mm high) rocks and stones and
any stones with a round or sloped edge. The Robotic Mower might try and climb such
rocks instead of recognising them as a barrier.
A Robotic Mower getting stuck on such a stone requires user intervention to restart mowing.
Contact with stones can result in damage to the blades.
Slopes
The Robotic Mower can navigate slopes up to a maximum of 40% incline or decline.
Slope should not be steeper
than 40%.
ASSEMBLY INSTRUCTIONS
ASSEMBLY INSTRUCTIONS