ZDNET’s key takeaways
- The Narwal Freo X Plus is a robot vacuum and mop available for $400.
- With millimeter-precision obstacle avoidance, a tangle-free design, and strong LiDAR mapping features, the Narwal Freo X Plus rarely gets stuck. It also features unique dust compression tech that stores debris for up to seven weeks before needing to be emptied.
- I wish the Narwal Freo X Plus performed as well on carpets as on hard floors, as it can leave debris behind on carpets. Its mopping feature also left me wanting, but it’s appropriate for this price range.
Robot vacuums are getting increasingly expensive, so it’s rare to see a midrange unit perform as well as some of the flagship robots I’ve tested. I’ve been testing the Narwal Freo X Plus<!–> for over a month now and can honestly say it performs way better than it should for a $400 robot vacuum.
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The Narwal Freo X Plus is one of the few robot vacuums I’ve tested where the device rarely gets a brush roller tangled up on an object. The vacuum can suck an object up or avoid it if it’s too large. This is one of the most important features in a robot vacuum for my home as I have three little kids and a dog.
As someone with 14 robot vacuums in their home, I was stumped when I first inspected the Freo X Plus brush roller. It’s unique, sitting at a 50-degree angle in the robot, with cone-shaped rubber strips and unequal sides. Instead of having an air opening in the middle of the vacuum, the brush roller is held by one end in the robot’s brush enclosure. The air and debris are directed to the other end, where the suction nozzle is found.
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Because of this design, the robot vacuum rarely gets tangled on hair, as most hair tangles slide off to the side as the brush rolls rapidly. The design also enables the Narwal Freo X Plus to pick up larger debris without getting tangled, like juice box straw wrappers, which seem to tangle most of my home’s robot vacuums.