YARBO SNOWBOT Snow Blower Robot Review

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • SNOWBOT is the world's FIRST ROBOT SNOWBLOWER! Like Roomba for your Driveway. But is it up to the job? See how it worked for me & my thoughts on this groundbreaking Snowblower powered by a battery.
    Snowbot loaned me with his machine at no charge. No commissions, scripts or requirements were part of this video.
    Check me out on Instagram for great photos and more project updates
    / silvercymbal
    Disclaimer:
    Due to factors beyond the control of Silver Cymbal, I cannot guarantee against improper use or unauthorized modifications of this information. Silver Cymbal assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. Use this information at your own risk. Silver Cymbal recommends safe practices when working on machines and or with tools seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of Silver Cymbal, no information contained in this video shall create any expressed or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage, or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or from the information contained in this video is the sole responsibility of the user and not Silver Cymbal.
    Snowbot S1 Pro Review
    Yarbo S1

Komentáře • 659

  • @SilverCymbal
    @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety +97

    *Update: There are multiple reasons I would avoid this company & never buy this product* - I have repeatedly offered these guys a second chance, free review. Every request has been ignored - Instead they are working with channels that don't review equipment, all sponsored of course to be sure of the outcome.

    • @W2mNm
      @W2mNm Před 2 lety +2

      😂 you're going to see that racing down the street by May! Seriously though, that was a great donation!

    • @randoir1863
      @randoir1863 Před 2 lety +2

      That's so great of you to donate it ! If any one can tweak that machine, its the up and coming builders of tomorrow!!!

    • @manofsan
      @manofsan Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks for this review. I was looking forward to seeing this snowbot clear some driveways, but you've shown me a much more realistic picture of what it's capable of. Thanks for showing us the reality, warts and all.

    • @VanlilfewithDaleandBailey
      @VanlilfewithDaleandBailey Před 2 lety

      I such high hopes. Lets hope the next version is actually practical to use.

    • @stt9895
      @stt9895 Před 2 lety +2

      Hey someone is using your logo for spam on CZcams!

  • @explorenaked
    @explorenaked Před 2 lety +156

    In my neighbor hood the automated snow removing system is the neighbor kid looking to make a few bucks. Pretty reliable and doesn't get paid until the job is done. Imagine that.

    • @snowgorilla9789
      @snowgorilla9789 Před 2 lety +22

      I can't remember the last time I saw a kid shovel snow, never mind for money, when we were young blah, blah, blah

    • @MsTonya417
      @MsTonya417 Před 2 lety +14

      In my neighborhood I’m the “automated snow removal system “ the “kid” at 45 years old shoveling and snow blowing. No one in my neighborhood wants to leave their house to do anything like the good old days. Lol

    • @mtadams2009
      @mtadams2009 Před 2 lety +4

      In my neighborhood it’s 20 and 30
      Year old Latin men. They are out after ever storm.

    • @richardmeyer5518
      @richardmeyer5518 Před 2 lety +4

      They still make them?

    • @lengould9262
      @lengould9262 Před 2 lety +3

      16 you old grandson lives here, talks a lot about wanting to "bulk up", but only helped a bit shoveling snow once of ten times this winter. Bring on the bot.

  • @unpronounceable8012
    @unpronounceable8012 Před 2 lety +110

    Thanks for the honest review. It wasn't a great sign from the beginning that you had to be on turbo mode to get anything on a relatively light day

    • @SnowingNapalm
      @SnowingNapalm Před 2 lety +2

      yeah not even sure why non turbo mode is offered ... maybe incase you have the light fluffy flakes thats just really light blowing snow can be more efficient in weak mode and then stay in high torque mode for actually moving the real stuff actually if going for the high rpm version a heavy flywheel to store the energy once spun up like a battlebot could then hammer the ice to chunks shredding and throwing it further by rocking back n forth into the target snow giving time to spin up between hammerings

    • @ltmesq
      @ltmesq Před 2 lety +2

      That snow actually appeared relatively wet/heavy

  • @603Madison
    @603Madison Před 2 lety +77

    Wow, this thing is horrible! Thank you for the honest review!

  • @SimpleTruth1309
    @SimpleTruth1309 Před 2 lety +54

    My Toro 4 stroke single stage would self propel faster than I could walk if I tipped it forward by lifting the handle slightly, the rotating rubber snow blades would grab the driveway and propel the unit forward. It’s not that heavy either. I’m a small (unfit) guy and can carry it up the stairs to clear a large deck in the back of the house. So snowblowers don’t need to be ‘heavy’ to do a good job.

    • @mikeFPS1980
      @mikeFPS1980 Před 2 lety

      All you really need is a single stage for about 80% of snowstorms, for the other 20% you might have to hit it twice to get good results! I have 2 Honda snowblowers, a single stage one i purchased like 10 years ago and this past summer i purchased a 2 stage Honda (20+ year: old) with the track drive for 200 bucks what a steal almost zero rust dude had a heated garage and cleaned after each use, i still use the single stage more often but when that huge storm comes the big Honda is great!

    • @everybodysjonathan
      @everybodysjonathan Před 2 lety +4

      With my 30 year old toro ccr2000 I need to speed walk to keep pace with it. The more snow falls the further it throws it. Suzuki power ❤️

    • @OscyJack-
      @OscyJack- Před 2 lety +1

      My neighbors all have small single stage. I have a big two stage.
      For the average snowfall of 5" or less, the single stages seem to perform better and faster and are easier to wield. We also have slab driveways, and the single stage adapts much better whereas my 2 stage will leave areas unevenly cleared at the slab gaps.
      I'm impressed with those little guys

    • @TrillMurray
      @TrillMurray Před 2 lety

      You must get less snow than me lol

    • @dirkdiggler9379
      @dirkdiggler9379 Před 2 lety +1

      4 strokes are garbage. Give me the old 2 stroke

  • @silverlocomotive9127
    @silverlocomotive9127 Před 2 lety +70

    Great review. I for the life of me cant understand how crap like this ever makes it to the marketplace. This last storm was the lightest and fluffiest snow in recent memory.

    • @cumulusvapes7
      @cumulusvapes7 Před 2 lety +2

      @@andrewmaher5743 No doubt! I have a Massey ferguson ride em with a 42' blower and it can barely keep up with the snow we get! You would need 3 dozen of them things and even still, the way it comes down, they would be frozen in place till spring! Would just be like a few dozen lil speed bumps till then! lol Would have to hire a security guard to watch them, so you wouldnt lose them, ppl be out there at 4 am trying to chip it out of the ice to sell it for beer! No thanks! lol

    • @JoeR203
      @JoeR203 Před 2 lety +7

      A leaf blower would have done better.

    • @petebusch9069
      @petebusch9069 Před 2 lety +2

      It made it to marketplace because they ran out of money designing it and had to screw over those who bought one so they could continue development. What a deceptive thing to do, its clear this thing needs development. I would guess a device like this would need to weigh a minimum of at least 500 pounds to get any kind of real traction.

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 Před 2 lety

      @@andrewmaher5743 , people that are like yourself are ironically the ones that are not contributing to the human gene pool.

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 Před 2 lety

      I think that the size of the device is not the issue, but, rather, how it is constructed. I am convinced that a good snowplow needs to function less like a conventional snowplow and to function, at least in its first part, anyway, like a vacuum cleaner, as ice that would be sucked into the machine could then be immediately transported to the blower part of the snowplow. However, after that step and device are both done, a trio of devices could be used, namely, a laser that goes across the sidewalk, or area that is covered in ice, or a device that is a bunch of ice hammers and blades that alternate hitting the sidewalk, though I think that the laser ice removal device would be easier to build, and, after the ice is removed, it could be heated with a device that functions like a drying function of a dishwasher, and the third device can completely dry off the area to the point where there is not even the option to have black ice on the area that the snow and ice were removed from in the first place.

  • @memsb1
    @memsb1 Před 2 lety +10

    I get suspicious if a channel is anyways singing praises of products. It feels like the channel is just for sponsors. Honest and accurate reviews will always be appreciated!

  • @TheNortheastAl
    @TheNortheastAl Před 2 lety +44

    Thanks for giving us the truth on this snow blower robot. I’d hate to be the one who wasted money on purchasing it. Seemed like a great idea, but poorly executed.

    • @noheat4929
      @noheat4929 Před 2 lety +4

      Lol. This thing is a joke. They’re trying to defend its usefulness, but all their videos show it “working” in 1” of snow. Better off buying a li-on leaf blower to quickly move the dustings of snow this thing can handle.

    • @fenwayfan81
      @fenwayfan81 Před 2 lety +2

      @@yarboglobal you couldn’t even move a small 2 inch pile of snow and you think it would handle the blizzard that just came through?

    • @Jordanb911
      @Jordanb911 Před 2 lety

      @@yarboglobal I love the idea but it would never work for me unless it was a 2 stage and had a self charge dock and knew to clear snow ever 3 inches or so. I tend to deal with wet snow more than light dry snow.

  • @CityPrepping
    @CityPrepping Před 2 lety +68

    While I don’t get snow, this is entertaining nonetheless

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety +13

      Thank you! The snow is fun for the kids, but I am not sure I would miss it too much.

  • @rybfish76
    @rybfish76 Před 2 lety +41

    You know with the boomers retiring every day and the younger workforce happy to work from home, these types of machines are going to be critical for our aging population. While this little machine might not be the answer to this problem, I'm glad they are working on these robot machines to make them better. Great honest review!

    • @RustyShackelford_
      @RustyShackelford_ Před 2 lety +8

      What an ignorant comment

    • @bcc5701
      @bcc5701 Před 2 lety

      @@RustyShackelford_ you wanna plow the snow for them cuz I dont

    • @rybfish76
      @rybfish76 Před 2 lety +4

      @@UncleFjester woah seems like somebody didn't eat their grape nuts this morning.

    • @tlc12070
      @tlc12070 Před 2 lety

      Shut up boomer!

    • @sprucesoldier
      @sprucesoldier Před 2 lety

      Lazy Little Bastards

  • @drintro
    @drintro Před 2 lety +17

    I can't believe how clueless the designers of this are about basic physics. I'd like to see a bot that can just operate my Ariens Deluxe 30.

    • @RARufus
      @RARufus Před 2 lety

      Yes, when dealing with a lot of snow, size, mass and power are king when it comes to making it easier.

  • @breezy0037
    @breezy0037 Před 2 lety +20

    I'm super glad to see an honest review. I know people that get free things from companies to review in their videos. Not that I want someones product to fail but it's good to e honest about it when they do

    • @gabenorman8735
      @gabenorman8735 Před rokem

      Looks like there could be potential also looks like a single stage blower which we're never made to move a lot of snow a little more weight a two-stage auger and impeller maybe couple studs on the tracks could be onto something there I just no removal for a living I still think it'll be a while before I'm replaced you'll definitely need a smooth flat concrete or asphalt driveway to be effective few more years I don't think it'll be putting me out of a job just yet All in all pretty cool

  • @rrad8106
    @rrad8106 Před 2 lety +6

    As soon as you introduced it, I knew it was a failure, and for all the reasons you mentioned. We had our first substantial snow in two years this weekend (22 inches), and my old Toro 622 had problems with the depth. Even though the snow was light and fluffy, it still took 5 hours to clear the driveway. I really had to wrangle with the machine (which was still considerably better than just shoveling!). A robot machine would have just died. Period. Thank you for panning the technology!

    • @scottm5342
      @scottm5342 Před 2 lety +1

      I understand the "depth" issue, however...just thinking out loud here:
      What if these (future design) "roblowers" were trained to learn the perimeter AND they are sent out DURING the storm?
      By this I mean: Why wait until the storm is over?
      (Future thinking here)
      As soon as the local weather station reports at least 1" (or 25.4mm) of snow has fallen...my "RoBlower" (my made up name...don't steal it! :) is sent out to start cleaning the driveway.
      Maybe it keeps snowing?
      Ok...it goes back and does it again after getting the signal...
      Running out of watts?
      It gets sent to the recharge station.
      It keeps repeating this until the storm is done.
      * By having my RoBlower go out in multiple passes, it mitigates the depth issue. *
      R Rad,
      I don't deny the technology is not here (yet) but there were a LOT of people around the world trying to make an airplane...they all made mistakes...and some people actually made it work.
      :)

    • @TheVermontrules
      @TheVermontrules Před rokem

      If you go to the website for the robot, it is not designed to snowblow 2 feet of snow. If you use the app and program it correctly, it’s fully autonomous and supposed to go out multiple times during the storm and do a little at a time, so your driveways stays clear. I’m not saying this particular model works, but it’s a good idea and I’m sure they’ll be in use in the next few years.

  • @TheLawngineer
    @TheLawngineer Před 2 lety +5

    Oh man! Maybe they need to get 2 or 3 stage options. Shame that it didn’t work out in the end.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety +1

      I was very bummed out by this, they may figure it out in the end but it would have to be a lot heavier I think to make it work.

    • @TheLawngineer
      @TheLawngineer Před 2 lety

      @@SilverCymbal am I correct in that they are still beta testing these? Like, they aren’t for sale yet, right?

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety

      @@TheLawngineer What they told me is that you can order a S1 and they will ship it to you for $2600 I believe, but they will give you the S2 for free when it comes out. So its production but still kind of in development

    • @aguyandhiscomputer
      @aguyandhiscomputer Před 2 lety +1

      2-3 stage would be too heavy.

    • @TheLawngineer
      @TheLawngineer Před 2 lety +1

      @@yarboglobal I think it’s a great idea to send out units like this to test out and collect feedback to develop a better product! Thanks for the response! Looking forward to seeing how the final product comes along. It’s exciting to see the robotic technology being used this way.

  • @lawnmowerdude
    @lawnmowerdude Před 2 lety +5

    I think the best case for this type of machine is to
    Repeatedly clean your driveway as it actively snowing.

    • @coreysuffield
      @coreysuffield Před 2 lety

      exactly, it wasn't given a chance to function in its designed manner, like a roomba that runs all the time on a schedule so it starts clearing as the snow stars falling so it only has to deal with tiny layers of snow at a time and just continuously clears

    • @Mark-jd1jx
      @Mark-jd1jx Před 2 lety

      ​@@coreysuffield The issue with having it continuously run is you can't, It will run for only 1 hour and 30 minutes before losing all of it's battery and then having to recharge for 2 hours which you have to do your self a roomba will go and recharge it's self while this cannot. and in those 2 hours you may get more snow than this thing can handle.

  • @manofsan
    @manofsan Před 2 lety +13

    *Thanks for this review. I was looking forward to seeing this snowbot clear some driveways, but you've shown me a much more realistic picture of what it's capable of. Thanks for showing us the reality, warts and all.*

  • @mikeFPS1980
    @mikeFPS1980 Před 2 lety +6

    First i love the honest review, that gives your other reviews so much legitimacy, although i would never consider a robot to do snow blowing or even cut my grass, heck i returned my roomba vacuum because it wasn’t good enough! There is somethings a robot just can’t do! Keep up the good work!

  • @Bremend
    @Bremend Před 2 lety +1

    "I'm going to use the included remote" *Pulls out a gaming controller*

  • @eosjoe565
    @eosjoe565 Před 2 lety +1

    I can see it now... the unit goes haywire... you run up and kick the stop button only for it to reply "I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that. " :-)

  • @zwebsterz
    @zwebsterz Před 2 lety +9

    You’d think whoever made this thing had tested it at least once in real snow. I believe the manufacturer is using you to test it for the first time.

    • @michaelcharach
      @michaelcharach Před 2 lety

      I live in Canada and we get lots of snow. There is no real snow. It can come down light and fluffy like feathers or crazy thick and slushy, or any variation in-between. My ego snow blower works good on the fluffy light stuff, excellent on the stuff in the middle but would struggle with that really heavy snow you showed in the video.

  • @no1slisteninganyway
    @no1slisteninganyway Před 2 lety +7

    Interesting idea. I just saw a review of the Ryobi electric snow blower. It takes 4 40v batteries and I don't think it lasts more than 30 minutes but boy, does it move snow. Ryobi needs to automate that thing.

    • @mtadams2009
      @mtadams2009 Před 2 lety

      My neighbor had that unit and he says it goes for over and hour and he does his driveway and sidewalk. Which are both small. I was thinking of getting one for my deck.

    • @no1slisteninganyway
      @no1slisteninganyway Před 2 lety

      @@mtadams2009 Good to know. Thanks.

    • @jonsedman3416
      @jonsedman3416 Před 2 lety

      My buddy had on and I drove him around and they did 5 decent size driveways. They have different ones. I think the smallest is like 16 inch wide and then the big ass there’s like 24 or something like that. This one took two batteries. The size of the batteries also dictate how long it last for. I think he said that they were seven amp hour batteries. The batteries alone were like 700.00. I was actually really impressed.

  • @cherylskates
    @cherylskates Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks! When I saw the size of it, I wondered how it could possibly handle the 01/29/22 MA blizzard. Hope you post the next version & it performs better.

  • @mrMacGoover
    @mrMacGoover Před 2 lety +1

    The main problem seemed to be ground clearance issues with the undercarriage getting hung up on snow. When you look at a conventional tracked snow blower, there's up to 4 to 5 inches of clearance between the rear chassis and the ground. The company should look at the spacing of modern military tanks as an example of chassis spacing and clearances.

  • @elcheapo5302
    @elcheapo5302 Před 2 lety +3

    Snowthrowing is a very physical activity, either through an operator on the handles, or mounted to a tractor or skid steer. My two stage Toro HD weighs over 250lbs, and it still sometimes requires a little muscle on my part when the snow gets serious.

    • @Bremend
      @Bremend Před 2 lety

      And forget about wet snow, or if any leaves get burried

    • @TheRandompaint
      @TheRandompaint Před 2 lety

      Or like what we got in Ohio with a layer of ice under the snow, I had to pull out a metal hoe to get the job done

  • @TerminatoR99
    @TerminatoR99 Před 2 lety +6

    I live in Canada and love automation, if they can figure how to make one work, would be awesome!

  • @DiHandley
    @DiHandley Před 2 lety +2

    Just for testing purposes you could have put something really heavy on top to see if it improves traction.

  • @MrPromerican
    @MrPromerican Před 2 lety +2

    Great review SC.
    It needs an over size traction tire....triangular shape probably. Geofencing would be best instead of those poles. R&D dept needs to go back to the drawing board...

    • @MrPromerican
      @MrPromerican Před 2 lety

      @@yarboglobal I am excited to see it. Can't wait..

  • @mwolrich
    @mwolrich Před 2 lety +3

    Don’t feel bad for Snowbot, even my John Deere 318 with the 54” snowplow blade didn’t do well in Saturdays Nor’Easter…. Probably if they load it up with heavy LiFePO4 batteries, it would have enough power and weight to do better

    • @rfcasey
      @rfcasey Před 2 lety

      Put some lug tires on your 318 and you will get her done

  • @randoir1863
    @randoir1863 Před 2 lety +1

    Well back to the drawing board for the makers of snowbot !!!!!!

  • @ltmesq
    @ltmesq Před 2 lety +1

    Performed as I would have expected

  • @garage-guy207
    @garage-guy207 Před 2 lety +3

    Single-stage FAIL

  • @christophertaylor3644
    @christophertaylor3644 Před 2 lety +2

    It makes you wonder if the company tested it in actual snow.

  • @philsipad
    @philsipad Před 2 lety +1

    I can actually see this thing work if you leave it out there blowing back and forth as soon as you see couple inches on the ground. The trick with something like this is since it is doing all the work just leave the thing outside blowing continuously and swap the battery whenever it runs out.

    • @jedidiah5131
      @jedidiah5131 Před 2 lety

      I can see thieves just waiting to snag this thing, and sell the battery.

    • @devlinasssociatesllc4569
      @devlinasssociatesllc4569 Před rokem

      Agreed, it hasto be running before it piles up too much

  • @BunkMasterFlex77
    @BunkMasterFlex77 Před 2 lety +5

    Thanks for the honest review!

  • @88Heckenlively
    @88Heckenlively Před 2 lety

    I sent this to my dad that is 84 and still shovels his driveway (Spokane, Wa) and he laughed pretty hard.

  • @warrenscorner
    @warrenscorner Před 2 lety +1

    I saw this on another channel. They were blowing about 2” of powder snow. I knew it wouldn’t push through that wet heavy stuff. I’ll stick with my Kubota tractor. In 15 years it’s never failed me.

    • @TheRandompaint
      @TheRandompaint Před 2 lety

      I'll stick to using my children as child labor

    • @warrenscorner
      @warrenscorner Před 2 lety

      @@TheRandompaint how do you do that? We have two teenage grandchildren living next door. You can’t get them to leave the house.

  • @rfcasey
    @rfcasey Před 2 lety

    This product will eventually be produced to perfection. There is definitely a market for it. The elderly and the handicap. You do not have to move alot of snow to get a heart attack. Many people, in shape, and not overweight have experienced heart attacks from moving a mere 3 inches of snow. You do not realize it, but you put a tremendous amount stress on your heart shoveling in the cold. Believe it or not when they get this machine right, it will save countless lives, and no one will realize it.

  • @ProlificInvention
    @ProlificInvention Před 2 lety +2

    Pretty awesome you can control it wirelessly, also with a little design tweaking I can see this thing working as intended.

  • @plasmaman9592
    @plasmaman9592 Před 2 lety

    Plan ahead and get an in ground meeting system. I did mine myself and it cost me less than $2,500 not counting the concrete that was already going to be put down. I used pex pipes and a propane instant water heater. I knew before building a house that I didn't want to plow or shovel snow. I run it before the show starts so you don't get snow to stick to show off to the neighbors. The snow will over run the system in a blizzard but catch back up when the snow slows

  • @Jameson4327
    @Jameson4327 Před 2 lety +1

    Time to send it back to let the engineers figure it out why it's not working.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety

      Very true, but this one is going to the students of the local vocational school to experiment with

    • @aguyandhiscomputer
      @aguyandhiscomputer Před 2 lety +1

      It never should have left the engineers.

    • @coreysuffield
      @coreysuffield Před 2 lety

      already figured it out, USER ERROR

    • @aguyandhiscomputer
      @aguyandhiscomputer Před 2 lety

      @@coreysuffield an automated robot sucking is user error? Get out.

  • @Combatcm
    @Combatcm Před 2 lety

    Needs studs or tires. Need more PSI on the contact patch. Tracks sound like a great idea but with little weight they slip. Plus those treads are probably hard rubber. Cutting some sipes in the treads might make them more pliable to grip.

  • @Leonardokite
    @Leonardokite Před 2 lety +1

    I was hoping for a glowing review since that is an awesome idea. But although I'm sad it didn't work, I'm glad you gave it an honest review. Maybe someday.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety +1

      Me too, I was extremely let down. I knew there would be issues but the performance was so frustrating it was a bad surprise

    • @coreysuffield
      @coreysuffield Před 2 lety

      this was not an honest review, he never set up the beacons, and just ran it in the worst possible conditions, "see it just doesn't" after being placed in conditions it was never designed for and only ran it with the controller like a manually operated snow plow "see not as good as a real snow plow" when that is literally not what it is

  • @mr1pearl
    @mr1pearl Před 2 lety +1

    Just need to attach a seat to it and try again 😆

  • @grants169
    @grants169 Před 2 lety +1

    22 winters of homeownership and I still prefer the shovel over any blower. My driveway is 2-lane average length, but it's kinda steep. Any machine I put on it struggled to do anything and I went right back to the shovel that takes less effort and time.

    • @eosjoe565
      @eosjoe565 Před 2 lety +3

      I'm pretty sure you are in the extreme minority. :-) It also sounds like your snow blower needed some tire chains.

    • @grants169
      @grants169 Před 2 lety +2

      @@eosjoe565 the slope of driveway isn't conducive for a blower unless maybe some big ass commercial blower that takes up entirely too much room to be used like 3 hours per year.

  • @tomadams8714
    @tomadams8714 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Silver, I live in Eagan Minnesota and we get about 60 inches of snow a year and most of the time the snow comes with brutal cold and wind so the concept of having a remote controlled snow blower was very appealing. I signed up as a beta tester and my machine arrived yesterday. This past week we received 10in of snow in 2 snowfalls and knowing my machine was coming I did not clear some of my driveway. I set the snowbot to work on the driveway and was amazed and very pleased with it's performance. It cleared 10+ in of snow from the entire third lane of my driveway in 20 minutes. I don't know what happened to your unit but mine was amazing. I also understand that the updated machine I will be getting in October has a number of improvements including 2 stage blower and redesigned treads. I would normally never say this but I can't wait until it snows again to see how the Snowbot performs on fresh snow. I love this thing!!

  • @edwardf991
    @edwardf991 Před rokem

    Thanks for honest review. I'm looking for a remote controlled snowplow/ blower as I'm physically challenged and have to hire someone to plow my little sidewalk and driveway. I hope someone will develop a better one.

  • @d_dizzie_druck5753
    @d_dizzie_druck5753 Před 2 lety

    next place for this snowbot:
    The box is locked, the lights are on, its robot fighting time🤣

  • @W2mNm
    @W2mNm Před 2 lety +1

    I was rooting for it to do at least a little better than that. Too bad. Maybe it could be used to fetch the mail lol.
    Thanks for your review! Always detailed and honest! Good filming of it too.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety +1

      Me too, I was so excited for this one and I have hope that the company may do more with it, they are nice folks but the performance is what it is so maybe they will figure it out for the S2 model

  • @willboudreau1187
    @willboudreau1187 Před 2 lety +1

    Chris,
    I think all of your loyal viewers saw this one coming! You did yeoman's work spending your time on this mickey mouse toy (in its current confuration - see necessary improvements at the end). As a man who uses much heavier snow handling equipment in your videos, I suspect even you thought the unit wouldn't be up to the job going of withstanding rigorous testing in the aftermath of a nor’easter. The company wasted your valuable time by not having tested their unit before hand in any snowfall taller than 1" or heavier than dry powder. That being said, let me flesh out some details either you or other viewers may not have considered.
    I live a few towns over from you, so I too got clobbered with 2' of snow from the recent nor'easter. The archaeology of the snowstorm is as follows: we had warm weather and rain preceding the storm so the ground was wet as the storm picked up strength, then as the mercury fell we got a layer of slush accumulation as wet, concrete-like snow fell coating the ground, (and the trees and power lines, coating them like glue, weighing them down, accumulating further snow load as the storm proceeded, which would not have happened had we had light powder snow throughout the entire storm, hence the incredible tree and power line damage) and as temperatures plunged further into double and then single digits, dry powder snow characterized most of the remainder of the storm. So, what does that have to do with the SnowBot? The storm left the absolute worst type of snow load to clear for any snow blowing machine that was not designed for, and therefore lacked complete dominance over, those conditions. I have a 1,650lb (fully loaded with me, weights, quick hitch, blower, etc), 22hp, John Deere 445 with a hydraulically actuated 2-stage, 54” auger that was even struggling to get a footing initially clearing a working area. So when I saw your video promo, I got out the popcorn, chuffed, and said, “Well, this ought to be entertaining!” And sure enough, you arrived at the same pre-conceived conclusion as your viewers had. Here’s how it went for me.
    For starters, you man-handle-shove open your basement door because it has 2’ of snow (plus more from drifting) pressing against it. So now what? You are facing a 2+ foot thick wall of snow, and you have yet to trundle out to where you keep your snow blower. That is probably higher than the SnowBot itself. So already this testing session is an exercise in futility. However, to give the unit a fighting chance, you think you might shovel off the top 18” of powder, leaving 6” of powder to clear on the ground - not too difficult you think. But wait, remember, there is a layer of slush on the ground beneath the powder. The unit will therefore get no traction and of course will not be able to “snow blow” the liquid concrete-like slush. So to give the unit another fighting chance, you clear what you can of the insulating dry powder from the top of the snow load, wait for the slush to freeze, and now the unit can ride along the hard, irregular frozen slush surface clearing away the light powder. You can see where this analysis is going: if you must do so much work for the machine, you might as well clear everything by shovel yourself. And this doesn’t even consider the affect single digit temperatures have on the battery duration. From any objective standpoint then, this unit was outclassed in my hypothetical analysis, and even in your SilverCymbal test operating the unit across a practically already-cleared driveway.
    So, is the unit junk? For clearing the snowy remains of a nor’easter, probably/maybe. But wait, not so fast. If the storm had laid down ONLY dry powder, and you had set up the electronic marker stakes ahead of time, maybe you could have deployed the unit on an automatic schedule once an hour overnight (since we were getting 2-3” powder per hour at the height of the fury, I think the unit could have dealt with that) so the unit would have had a fighting chance.
    An important configuration element you may not have mentioned is whether the unit can programmatically change chute direction. This is critical, and probably a show stopper if it cannot. You need to understand the wind direction before programming the unit. My heavy duty machine can throw a rooster tail of snow 25’ in the air, however, throwing powder against the 30+ mph winds we experienced is kind of like shoveling fleas across a barn yard - all the dry powder will blow back across the driveway if you aim the chute upwind, as I quickly found out.
    Another configuration element is recharging. Having seen your driveway in your videos (VERY long), that unit would probably only clear a fraction of your area on one charge, so does the unit have the ability to sense low battery voltage and “come home” to a docking station to automatically recharge? If so, you would need to factor in recharging time when setting up the automatic program to calculate if the unit can afford down time for recharging in its efforts to keep up with 2-3” of snowfall per hour. To finish out the charging discussion, this unit should be stored in a warm location. If you doubt this, check the face plate on any battery and compare the “cranking amps” to the “cold cranking amps” to see how quickly cold temperatures degrade battery performance. So this introduces a further problem - how many of us have a “heated doghouse” or a swinging door in a garage through which this unit can travel to get inside to its charging station (plus the obstacle avoidance camera would probably not want to drive the unit through a swinging door unintended). So the practical considerations are these: either the unit is stored inside forcing you to get up in the middle of the night multiple times to “let it outside” to snow blow, meaning the automatic programming is now much less so, or the unit is stored outside, somehow protected from snowfall so it can reattach to the charging station, but suffering battery duration issues from the cold.
    So to sum up, the unit would probably work on exclusively dry powder on a modest length driveway if the snow is never given a chance to accumulate over a few inches and/or you wake up in the morning with clear skies and all you have to do is a one-time pass clearing off 2-3” of snow.
    Improvements for the machine? You betcha - weight, weight, and more weight. All else being equal, weight equals traction. To increase duration and traction, I’d say that unit needs at least several hundred more pounds of batteries. This would bring it up to 320lbs (given you said it weighs 120 lbs as it now stands). This puts it on the heavy side of a high end self propelled gas snow blower, which is much more appropriate for New England storms. To keep the unit functional for people in milder climates with less aggressive snowfalls, the add-on battery packs could be modular and optional. It needs a programmable override on the obstacle avoidance camera for maneuvering in tight quarters.
    I might be in over-length, over-analysis territory by now, but as someone who had to clear the snow using a high powered, heavy duty, hydraulically, actuated 2-stage snow blower and found even that challenging, I think I’m qualified. I hope this helps, and I hope we can start a discussion of these points and others to generate some feedback to the company, whose product is clearly an alpha-release, not yet ready for prime time, but still seems like a good enough idea under controlled conditions if it can tweaked.

  • @cbaxter6527
    @cbaxter6527 Před 2 lety

    Try one or two sand bags on top. The lithium batteries are too light.
    Few years back, girl in 1/2 ton pickup with bald all season tires in back was stuck in the snow on side street. I suggested need weight over rear axle. It only required 4 adults standing on the bumper holding the tail gate. She drove out to the main street like a Sunday drive without a concern in the world. Yah! traction works everytime.

  • @dangeroustoman
    @dangeroustoman Před 2 lety +3

    Wait till summer maybe it will mow some grass. lol

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před 2 lety +1

      Damn you might be on to something! Imagine if they put a dethatcher kit on the front, it would probably do great for that.

    • @dangeroustoman
      @dangeroustoman Před 2 lety

      @@SilverCymbal I was thinking an old push mower with the spinning blades it's almost the same.

    • @dangeroustoman
      @dangeroustoman Před 2 lety

      @@SilverCymbal oh don't forget my royalties.
      I could really use it. 😁

  • @dogpalacedogtraining
    @dogpalacedogtraining Před rokem

    The man who created it is now making snowbot into yarbot with various attachments.. and when I looked most of the stuff shown looks very artificial and poorly at that... im in the facebook group.. and now when I look here it looks the same and same movement.. I was suspicious of it and im truly grateful I found your review. Thank you!! ❤️

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před rokem +2

      Thank you for the nice note. I have been watching Yarbo, Toadi, Luba & Novabot very closely & the companies behind them. The claims for Yarbo unit are absolutely ridiculous, imo. It mows, blows, tows and people are led to believe they will never do yard work again when they couldn't even get snow removal right. I will be releasing another video shortly about what is happening with these devices and to avoid the kickstarter/inidigo variety. One thing is for sure, until a REAL ipartial demo is provided the rest is all trick shots, clever editing and CGI. As I said before, if the unit is real send me one and I will be the first to offer a free, featured video to show it off and help them sell it.

  • @1999Shortstuff
    @1999Shortstuff Před 2 lety +1

    I have a 250 foot long, horseshoe, concrete driveway that had a sharp incline (my house is 18' above street level). The former owner installed a heating system under the driveway, but it never worked correctly. I would love to buy a Snowbot or anything similiar that works and will solve my winter-time driveway headaches.

    • @buzrash
      @buzrash Před 2 lety

      No snowblower robot in the world can handle the length and grade of your driveway. Stop being cheap and Hire a reputable snow removal person and your winter headache will be gone.

    • @1999Shortstuff
      @1999Shortstuff Před 2 lety

      @@buzrash Maybe you didnt hear the news; however, the Wright Brothers built a contraption that can actually fly. Also, man has walked on the moon. Mark my words, if a consumer need exists for something, an inovative person(s) will build it. BTW, I am not cheap. I currently own a very expensive and powerful skidsteer to clear my driveway (if you don't know what that is, look it up). However, I am always looking for the next great idea, especially one that involves reducing wintertime work.

  • @SrRAFAGAS
    @SrRAFAGAS Před 8 měsíci +2

    I came here for the haters in the comments and i was not disappointed.

  • @mikeboyer1114
    @mikeboyer1114 Před 2 lety +5

    Keep up the great honest reviews!

  • @andrewgilbreath1331
    @andrewgilbreath1331 Před 2 lety +1

    Sheesh you could move more snow then that with a robot lawnmower 😆😆😆

  • @MacDiggity
    @MacDiggity Před 2 lety +3

    A solution in search of a problem.

    • @skeptical1465
      @skeptical1465 Před 2 lety +1

      Not at all.
      It's just a luxury item.
      People who can afford this can afford to just pay someone to come and shovel their property for them.
      Or if they're poor they can just shovel it themselves.

  • @mr.m3837
    @mr.m3837 Před 2 lety +2

    For what that is able to do, you might as well just drive over it.
    Looks like fun to operate though 👍🏻

  • @brianeaton3734
    @brianeaton3734 Před 2 lety +5

    Yeah, that thing sucks.

  • @Clint3571
    @Clint3571 Před 2 lety +1

    Just from a quick glance, I think this thing could use some decent wear shoes on the sides with a good approach angle. It seems like it is getting hung up on a sharp angle that is too low to the ground. Ego has a well-reviewed two stage blower that seems like it would be a better platform to build off of.

  • @hambone500
    @hambone500 Před 2 lety +1

    I wonder if it could be used as a leaf thrower?

  • @mrBDeye
    @mrBDeye Před rokem

    It's the story about a little snowbot that thought he could, but couldn't.

  • @Tony-rl2fr
    @Tony-rl2fr Před 2 lety

    My 2 cents, you need a decent gas powered 2 stage to make a real impact. The drive wheels could be electric but the business end needs to be gas powered. Also it needs to be able to angle up and down. Anyone who's ever operated a snowblower knows what I mean. You hit a crack or control joint in the driveway, you have to rotate up a little to get over it then back down to dig in down to the surface.

  • @Hppyzmbie
    @Hppyzmbie Před 2 lety

    It's great that there are companies out there trying to bring new tech to market. It is unfortunate that this is a bust but it's still cool to see. Thank you for the honest review, your viewers appreciate it!

  • @handydadtv
    @handydadtv Před 2 lety +1

    I knew it was too good to be true.

  • @JohnS-er7jh
    @JohnS-er7jh Před 10 měsíci

    thanks for posting this video. I figured this wouldn't work that effectvely. And the price for the Unit and the Snow Blower attachment is around $6,000 ! Forget it.

  • @simplesimon755
    @simplesimon755 Před 2 lety

    Sorry this wasn't a success for you but I appreciate you posting it if only to help us see what things are considered during a test. I'm in South Texas so hopefully we won't ever need one of these (looking at you winter storm of 2021) but still, it's always good to learn a thing or two.

  • @waveranger4974
    @waveranger4974 Před 2 lety +2

    No, thanks not for me. I prefer to bundle up and run my snowblower. Okay I may be odd but I find it enjoyable. Did I mention I’m Michigan born and raised?

    • @aguyandhiscomputer
      @aguyandhiscomputer Před 2 lety

      Same here. Southeastern area. Love my Toro 21". Super clean results.
      Supposed to get 8-14" in the next few days.

  • @Path2Insanity
    @Path2Insanity Před 2 lety +1

    put some sandbags on it to help with the weight, maybe towards the front

  • @archael18
    @archael18 Před rokem

    Using the snowblower is so fun that it doesn't seem like a problem to me lol. But anyone that used a snowblower will know that there is so much manual intervention needed that I just don't see a bot happening. The cost, size, and weight, to overcome the manual input is just going to be insane.

  • @cooper10182
    @cooper10182 Před 2 lety

    As an idea, it has merit. I say the biggest problems are the weight distribution (center of gravity would probably work better slightly more forward ) and battery technology not being able to deliver enough power.

  • @adisharr
    @adisharr Před 2 lety

    These last few snow falls I've needed to get a running start into the snow with my Toro and I'm 255 lbs. No way this little bot is going to do anything as you have certainly demonstrated 😂

  • @GYMMYT
    @GYMMYT Před 2 lety +1

    One wonders if the manufacturer even tested the product in real snow

    • @aguyandhiscomputer
      @aguyandhiscomputer Před 2 lety

      Yup. I've seen too many of their videos of it doing a slow, poor job.

  • @ChevyCitation
    @ChevyCitation Před 2 lety +1

    Maybe one day we will see that on display in the front section of a Applebee's

  • @SpiderHamPeterPorker
    @SpiderHamPeterPorker Před 2 lety

    Roborock and Ego need to come together to create a snowblowing robot that works.

  • @AJsGreenTopics
    @AJsGreenTopics Před 2 lety

    We get 10 plus inches of snow. I will stick to my 2 stage snowblower. Thanks for sharing. 😎

  • @mattb9664
    @mattb9664 Před 2 lety

    That 'piece of technology' is an extraordinary liability if left unattended by the operator...

  • @moflexmusicinc.6060
    @moflexmusicinc.6060 Před 2 lety

    Bigger beefy wheels , larger battery platform for lower center of gravity , larger blades ( should do the trick).
    Honestly they should double the size of the unit ( add more weight to it which will give it better traction )

  • @johngalt97
    @johngalt97 Před 2 lety

    They need to enter the snowbot in a few battlebot competitions to make it more robust and aggressive.

  • @bobmcl2406
    @bobmcl2406 Před 2 lety

    Well, at least those of us in the snow belt now know that we are safe from the march of our new Robot Overlords. 😁

  • @FezCaliph
    @FezCaliph Před 2 lety

    I was happy to see so much snow specifically for this video!

  • @mp-xt2rg
    @mp-xt2rg Před 2 lety +1

    Turns out it was designed by some Chinese dude that lives in Shenzhen who's never seen snow in his life.

  • @danhunters8226
    @danhunters8226 Před 2 lety +1

    Making snowblowers is a solved problem, but it seems that's what they're having problem with. If the software and tracking system work they should license it to a company that knows how to make snowblowers.

  • @sethc4758
    @sethc4758 Před rokem

    wow, at that price its best to just get an old four-wheeler with a plow.. the idea is awesome, sure would make my winters much easier but its not there yet.

  • @TheReaper1416
    @TheReaper1416 Před rokem

    It looks like they're making a new one under the "Yarbo" brand that can also cut grass and stuff (with a different attachment). Both websites use the same business address and the same unit number so yeah, hopefully the new one is better and can actually remove snow.

  • @AndreViens
    @AndreViens Před 2 lety

    Gonna be a cold day in New England before I give up my Ariens.

  • @AmruteshPuranik
    @AmruteshPuranik Před 2 lety

    Oh dear lord. This was a sad story. I was really hoping this works. Thanks for the review.
    I have ordered one long time ago and it's taking for ever to reach me.

  • @dontbanmebrodontbanme5403

    I found out about Yarbo throw their lawn mower. Based on this performance and the fact I haven't seen a single video that they didn't make, I'll save my $4,400!

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  Před rokem

      Very smart move. I hate these guys, they lied about me and they didn't like that I called them out. When they turned into Yarbo they took 3.5million from people promised delivery in 2 months. Now they are told it will be a year or more. Absolute garbage product and even worse company. Save your money with this one.

  • @joemccall8991
    @joemccall8991 Před 2 lety +1

    Saw the title and was excited to sell my 24" Toro and sit back watching something else plow my driveway.. Sad to see that the technology isn't quite there yet, maybe the next version will blow.

  • @seanpeine9258
    @seanpeine9258 Před 2 lety

    Exciting! To bad it did not work well, but that is how I feel about my electric snowblower that I walk behind it’s only good for about half the snow fall. When it works it works well. Hope they stick with it. Thanks for an honest review!

  • @btrswt35
    @btrswt35 Před 2 lety

    Simple solution. Take a commercially built snow blower and add the robotics to that. I see too many problems with this (from the light weight, lack of traction/ground clearance, very small discharge shoot, etc).

  • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
    @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Před 2 lety +1

    How is it “fully autonomous” if someone is standing there controlling it?

  • @thebigdoghimself
    @thebigdoghimself Před 2 lety

    Lubricate the impeller and chute. Some folks use cooking spray, I use a product from Boeing that is made for snow blowers.

  • @sueeld1
    @sueeld1 Před 2 lety +1

    Haha. I love your videos. That was entertaining. I would love one of those for my driveway but maybe by version 20 it will work in MN. Do you think it would throw wood chips? I have a bunch of wood chips down that I wanted to move. Maybe it would vacuum those up and shoot it into a wheel barrow or trailer for me? #videoidea

  • @countryside8122
    @countryside8122 Před 2 lety

    I like my Cub Cadet 3x. It throws quite far and has a great auger system. Not sure what kind of lithium batteries they use, but most freeze in temperatures below zero.

  • @angrygaragemechanic
    @angrygaragemechanic Před 2 lety

    Well,it was fun to watch but I'll stick with my Ego 2 stage 😂

  • @RARufus
    @RARufus Před 2 lety

    Robotic snow blowing is nothing like a robot vacuum. There are many more challenges involved and many are not even shown in this video. For the snow I clear regularly in Minnesota, there are different pavement conditions, various types of snow, ice plowed up from the road, sometimes high winds, etc. I very much admire their ambition, but to do it well it would take a much larger machine and would be prohibitively expensive. Edit: After watching this again, it could possibly be modified to mulch leaves which seems like a much simpler task.

  • @rogerveium3753
    @rogerveium3753 Před 2 lety

    Great addition to a Miami home!

  • @pesto88
    @pesto88 Před 2 lety +1

    This demonstration showed this product is so early in concept that it was irresponsible of the company to ship you one even as a prototype. It performed so badly it doesn’t even hint at being a viable product to anyone who views the video. SMH, the person who authorized this to be sent out should be given their walking papers.

  • @TimeToCheckReality
    @TimeToCheckReality Před 2 lety

    It's a problem with electric or robotic mowers and snow blowers that are made by companies that have no experience with the tools. Your lack of throwing with the sticky snow wasn't a lack of power. The way it was tossing it forward should be obvious to anyone with a small single stage snow thrower (which this is). Some of the sticky snow sealed off the small opening to the chute. If you look at the chutes on more recent snow throwers are more open to help prevent jams like this.