

Robot mowers are starting to look a little less like lawn Roombas and a lot more like serious outdoor machines. The Lymow One Plus is a good example of that shift.
Instead of using small wheels and lightweight razor-style blades, this robotic mower comes with rubber tracks, dual rotary cutting blades, RTK navigation, AI vision, and a larger cutting deck aimed at homeowners with bigger, more uneven yards.
The Lymow One Plus is now available at Amazon for $2,999, which puts it firmly in the premium robot mower category. That price is also a reminder that this is not really designed for someone with a tiny, flat patch of grass behind a townhouse. It is aimed more at people who have larger lawns, slopes, rougher terrain, and maybe a few areas where a basic robot mower would normally get stuck.

The most obvious difference is the drive system. The Lymow One Plus uses rubber tracks, almost like a miniature tank, instead of the standard wheels found on many robot mowers.
That matters because real lawns are rarely perfect. They have roots, bumps, soft patches, slopes, gravel edges, uneven ground, and random obstacles that seem to appear out of nowhere. Wheeled robot mowers can sometimes struggle in those situations, especially if the grass is wet or the ground is loose.
Lymow says the One Plus can handle slopes up to 45 degrees and clear obstacles up to 2.8 inches. The tracked design should help it keep better contact with the ground, giving it more grip across rougher terrain.
That does not mean it will magically solve every lawn problem. Deep ruts, heavy mud, exposed cables, loose garden tools, and messy yard layouts can still create trouble for any robotic mower. But the tracked setup gives the One Plus a more rugged starting point than many wheel-based models.

Many robotic mowers use small pivoting razor blades. That approach works well when the mower runs frequently and only trims a little grass at a time. But it can be less convincing when the grass gets thicker, taller, or slightly out of control after a rainy week.
The Lymow One Plus takes a different approach. It uses the company’s LyCut System 2.0, which includes two SK5 tool-steel rotary blades spinning at up to 6,000 RPM. The mower also has a 16-inch cutting width, which is wider than what you typically see on smaller robot mowers. Basically, this is built more like a compact automated lawn mower than a light-duty trimming robot.
Key cutting specs include:
The floating deck is also worth noting. Since many yards are not perfectly level, a cutting deck that can better follow the ground should help reduce uneven cuts and scalping. That is especially useful for lawns with dips, slopes, and bumpy sections.

Lymow also says the blade design creates airflow that helps lift flattened grass before cutting. That could be useful after rain, morning dew, foot traffic, or kids and pets flattening parts of the lawn. Real-world results will still depend on grass type, mowing frequency, and how well the yard is mapped.
One of the biggest changes in the robot mower market is the move away from buried boundary wires. Older robot mowers often required homeowners to install a physical wire around the yard, which could be time-consuming and annoying if the layout changed later.
The Lymow One Plus skips that system. Instead, it combines RTK satellite positioning, VSLAM visual mapping, and AI vision to understand where it is and where it should mow.
The mower also comes with an RTK reference station, which helps improve positioning accuracy compared with standard GPS alone. From there, users can create mowing zones and schedules through the app. The One Plus can manage up to 80 zones, which could be useful for properties with separate front yards, backyards, side yards, garden areas, tree sections, and no-mow spaces.
That flexibility is one of the big reasons wire-free robot mowers are gaining attention. You are not locked into a buried cable, and you can adjust virtual boundaries through software instead of digging around the lawn.

Navigation is only part of the story. A robot mower also needs to avoid the stuff people leave in the yard.
The Lymow One Plus uses binocular AI cameras, ultrasonic sensors, rain sensors, off-ground detection, and a front bumper sensor. The camera system is designed to recognize common outdoor objects such as hoses, toys, tools, pets, and other lawn clutter. That is especially important because this mower is not using tiny blades tucked inside a small trimming disc. It has a more serious cutting system, so obstacle detection and safe scheduling matter.
Lymow also includes a heated camera lens with anti-glare coating, which is designed to help with fogging, condensation, and bright sunlight. That may sound like a small detail, but robot mowers often run early in the morning when dew is common, so camera visibility can make a real difference.
Still, safety is not something to treat casually. This is an autonomous machine with spinning blades. Even with sensors, it is smart to keep children, pets, loose tools, and garden accessories away from the mowing area while it is running.

The Lymow One Plus uses a LiFePO4 battery, which is generally known for long cycle life compared with many standard lithium-ion battery types. Lymow rates the battery for 2,000 charge cycles. The higher-output 10A version is rated for up to 1.73 acres per day, depending on yard layout and conditions. That daily coverage rating is one of the reasons this mower is being positioned for larger properties rather than small suburban lawns.
Charging speed will also matter for people with bigger yards. The more quickly the mower can recharge and return to work, the more ground it can cover in a day. As with any robot mower, actual coverage will depend on how complicated the yard is, how many zones are active, slope conditions, grass height, and how often the mower needs to avoid obstacles.
The One Plus is also not a lightweight machine. It has nearly 78 pounds, so setup and manual repositioning may require some effort. That weight makes sense given the tracks, cutting system, battery, and larger frame, but it is something buyers should know before it shows up at the door.

The Lymow One Plus is not trying to be the cheapest or smallest robot mower on the market. It is aimed at homeowners who want a more capable robotic mower for a larger or more complicated lawn.
Its main selling points are pretty clear:
That last point matters. At $2,999, this is a serious purchase, not a casual weekend gadget. It competes in the same broader category as premium robot mowers from brands such as Mammotion, Segway Navimow, Roborock, and Yarbo, all of which are trying to make robotic lawn care smarter and less dependent on buried wires.
For a small, flat lawn, the Lymow One Plus may be more machine than necessary. But for larger yards with slopes, uneven ground, thicker grass, and trickier mowing zones, it shows where the premium robot mower market is heading.
Robot mowers are no longer just about keeping grass lightly trimmed. Models like the Lymow One Plus are moving closer to full-size outdoor power equipment, only with mapping, app control, and enough onboard intelligence to handle more of the job on their own.
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