And because it had memorized the route leading up to that doorstop, it was going to faithfully repeat it every time until it was forced to learn a different one.
The fix is to move the doorstop to the height that flips the switch to “on” instead of “off”.
@werehatrack or design the unit so that the switch is better protected from inadvertent operation from random projections; one shouldn’t have to deal with a new hole in their wall or baseboard because of such a faux pas.
I hereby blame you for this design error and the resulting potential hole in my baseboard.
I mean. I don’t trust anything just “anyone” posts on the internet. And this would be such an odd and statistically unlikely occurrence. And super easy to fix. Offset the start point a tiny bit. Could it happen ok sure. Or if you wanted to stage with a specific setup. Robot vacuum logic is predictable. Or you could just make it up…
We have all been there
Turned off by the erection
Boioioioioing
And because it had memorized the route leading up to that doorstop, it was going to faithfully repeat it every time until it was forced to learn a different one.
The fix is to move the doorstop to the height that flips the switch to “on” instead of “off”.
@werehatrack or design the unit so that the switch is better protected from inadvertent operation from random projections; one shouldn’t have to deal with a new hole in their wall or baseboard because of such a faux pas.
I hereby blame you for this design error and the resulting potential hole in my baseboard.
I mean. I don’t trust anything just “anyone” posts on the internet. And this would be such an odd and statistically unlikely occurrence. And super easy to fix. Offset the start point a tiny bit. Could it happen ok sure. Or if you wanted to stage with a specific setup. Robot vacuum logic is predictable. Or you could just make it up…