We have been living with this for a couple of weeks and here is our complete review of this smart home sweeping robot.
Trifo Lucy: Overview
Trifo Lucy purely reflects the technological advancements happening in the robot vacuum industry. The vacuum cleaner has a dedicated AI-backed camera for navigation and real-time object identification among others. You are now expecting a robot vacuum that just moves smartly across your house, but that’s not it. Lucy’s camera works as a smart security camera for your house which can sense any intruder motions and alert you real time. Apart from the power full vacuum with 3,000Pa suction power, Trifo Lucy can clean your floors with its mopping capabilities as well. The detachable mopping module makes it easy for you to clean the house without having to buy an extra mopping bot. Most of all, you have an extra security camera to use as a surveillance camera for your room. Let’s have a deeper look into the Trifo Lucy robot vacuum.
Trifo Lucy: Specifications
The Trifo Lucy surely has what it takes to be your next robot vacuum and your home security patrol robot. Smart room mapping, object identification, and intruder alerts make Lucy a whole-another-level vacuum for your home.
Trifo Lucy Design
Robot vacuums have been following the circular design ever since the iRobot Roombas, and the Lucy is no different than that. The familiar design language with a piano black and gold-finished top give it a premium look while roaming around your house. At 14.2″ in diameter and 3.3″ in height, the Lucy robot vacuum is quite packed to run errands under your armchairs and get in between the furniture without any hesitance. Still, I felt the diameter could have been slightly lesser so that it could cover more area. We will talk about its cleaning performance later. The buttons are placed neatly over the top lid along with the logo. You can see the same buttons once you raise the top cover. I truly loved the control buttons as there are two of them – one for running and one for returning to its charging base. The additional button for resetting the robot, a USB charging port, and a WiFi indicator light are placed under the lid. Before we get started with the dustbin and filters, let’s look at other things from the outside. No additional buttons or ports are provided on the sides. You can find the anti-collision bumper at the front with a pair of sensors. If you have been wondering, one of them is an actual camera with depth sensing. The bottom panel looks very similar to other vacuums we reviewed here before; it has two side wheels and an omnidirectional front wheel. The only shortcoming at a glance is the lack of an additional side brush. You can find only one side brush on the Trifo Lucy vacuum, but it has long and short bristles for effective cleaning. The lack of a second brush is well-managed by the main roller brush within the suction inlet that can suck in all the residues and pet hairs. For better pet hair cleaning and monitoring, you should check out the Trifo Ollie robot vacuum review especially if you are a pet parent. Trifo adds one mount for the mopping unit behind the side wheels. This detachable mopping module has small water storage, and you can attach the mopping fabric to it seamlessly. The dustbin is easy to remove with a button after lifting the top lid. A HEPA filter is added to the dustbin to eliminate any amount of dust. The dustbin is large enough (600 ML capacity) to hold several days without emptying it more often. When the cleaning is done, the vacuum can return to the charging base, which you can place on the floor, connected to the wall outlet. The cladding stations should be connected to the power supply and the vacuum unit is clever enough to locate the base unit. The base has a design to hide the extra cable underneath the unit. Lucy from Trifo packs quite many features, but that does not affect the sleek design language. The mopping module and an extra-large dustbin are neatly seated within a compact, loveable design.
Cleaning and Performance
After a few weeks of running the vacuum in my house, all I can say is Trifo is taking vacuuming to another level for those who have pets. Powerful suctioning at 3,000 Pa is no joke, especially on the unclean carpets. It can suck in dust, food residues, and pet hairs from every nook and corner without missing a bit. Talking of pet hair, Lucy has a Pet edition with a pet hair extractor on it. We are talking about the regular one here, which has no special filter for pet hairs. Instead, we got a the one with mopping module which we will discuss here. The single side brush did not convince me when I unboxed the Lucy vacuum for the first time. Although, it proved me wrong eventually. Trifo Lucy can work magic on your floors and carpets with intelligent floor monitoring and object identification. Unlike the cheaper robot vacuums, this one does not bump into the wall and scratch your furniture. Dirt swept by the side brush is then caught by the roller brush in the middle, which works quite effectively. Carpet Performance Every robot vacuum on the market says you can get it on the carpet and get the cleaning done. All such vacuums can climb, but not everyone was made for a fully-fledged carpet cleaning. Here is how it went with the Lucy vacuum. I have a medium pile rug in my living room which I tried to clean with Lucy. With the suction power of 3,000 Pa and the middle rolling brush was quite effective in tackling the dust particles and pet hair without leaving any remainings. How good is the mopping? Trifo Lucy is not just limited to home sweeping; this is a mopping combo vacuum that can wipe the floors and clean up every last dime of dirt. Having tried similar mop vacuums from iRobot and iLife, I personally expected a top-of-the-notch cleaning from Lucy. However, with all these hypes, the mopping was not that adequate to replace my existing mopping bots immediately. You can do the vacuum and mopping at the same time. The mopping mechanism is just behind the vacuum brush. The vacuum is capable to do the suction and moping in the same stretch while running. The water will dip from the water tank while moping. The vacuum will leave water residue on the floor, and that’s quite natural just like other mopping devices. Lucy could not make sure or double-check for the clean surface; it kept going along its way. The mopping is pretty basic functionality, consider as a cherry on top. I’d give it a 3/5 for the mopping alone, while the vacuuming was pretty neat. Does the Trifo Lucy get stuck? Robot vacuums are usually either bulky or have an extra LIDAR sensor on top which make them stuck under furniture. Lucy, on the other hand, is sleeky, even though the diameter was not that compact. It neither got stuck under any furniture nor between any chairs and table legs, thanks to its intelligent vision that can identify objects and avoid any possibility to get stuck. No more bumping into the cables on the floor and lost around it crying for help. Lucy can even identify smaller things on the floor including pet feces and avoid making your household a mess. What about the noise? Having a noisy machine running all day inside the house is not a pleasant thing to have, especially if you are working from home. We tested Lucy in my household only to see that it makes just the same noise as any other robot vacuums we tested so far. While the Max mode produces around 70dB of noise, the silent mode could only take it down to around 50dB which is still noisy. The high noise from the Trifo Lucy is because of the side brush, roller brush, and vacuum pump working in tandem to make sure the surface is clean. I would recommend scheduling the cleaning when you are not home so that you can avoid a noisy background while doing other house chores. The robot vacuum from Trifo can run buttery smooth even when you are not around with its intelligent abilities and cleaning modes.
Home Security and Navigation
As I said before, the Trifo Lucy doubles as a home security patrol robot as well. With the intelligent camera on wheels, you can have your eyes on every corner of your house when you are away. You don’t need Jeff Bezos’ home patrol bot when you have this robot vacuum. The camera with a night vision sensor on Trifo Lucy works to learn and adapt your room environments, as well as to show you the indoor visuals when you are away. You can schedule motion sensing with the Lucy so that it alerts if it finds somebody moving inside your empty house. You can see the footage whether or not it is vacuuming. When the cleaning is all done and you want a visual of your household, there is an option to set the suction to zero and let the vacuum do its job. Lucy can show you 1080P HDR footage throughout the day with support from the night vision IR LEDs. Actually, the video output is quite good with the natural daylight and surprised me. However, do not expect a top-notch video quality if your hallways and rooms are not lit. The IR camera is also pretty good, and the bring decent quality footage in night. Well, Trifo utilized the monitoring camera well with additional app features. You can set the intruder alert and the device will automatically save the five seconds long clips when detects the motion. Later, you can see the history of intruder alerts and access the video clips right from the app. How good is the navigation? Trifo walks away from the conventional LIDAR-based navigation. With the intelligence-backed camera on Lucy, the robot vacuum can adaptively move through the floor without bumping into unnecessary things, humans, or pets. While the LIDAR-based navigation on conventional vacuums uses the IR light to sense the obstacles and take turns, this one has an actual vision. The front-facing camera detects objects and avoids any obstacles. But this was not the case when I ran the vacuum for the first time. It went absurdly through the floor to create a 3D room map for the first time. Within a couple more runs, the robot vacuum had created a whole map of my house inside the Trifo app on my phone. Eventually, Lucy got better and better at moving around the house and avoiding any obstacles. The vision-based navigation helps the vacuum to get back to its charging station peacefully without roaming around other rooms. Also, when it completes almost 2 hours of running, the vacuum gets back to the base, charge itself, and resumes the job if your house is that big. I didn’t have to wait for that since the robot vacuum did finish all the jobs in a single charge.
App and Remote Controls
Trifo Lucy is completely controlled by your phone and Alexa-enabled smart speakers. This household robot vacuum has a fully-fledged mobile app for both Android and iPhone users. I was able to power up the vacuum and get the full features after signing in and adding the device to the app. You can connect the Trifo Lucy to both 2.4GHz and 5GHz WiFi networks which is quite smooth if you have a mesh WiFI network across your house. Connecting the vacuum to a single 5GHz router is not a great idea since the real-time updates need a constant internet connection. I connected it with my Nest WiFi’s 5GHz channel which still works nicely to get the real-time status of the vacuum on my phone. Once you start the device from the app, you can see the map of your house, which it creates from the first few runs. A handful of buttons are provided in the app to control, take it back to the charging base, and watch the live video stream from its 1080P camera. Trifo lets you choose certain rooms to clean, and avoid specific areas just by drawing the lines on the map. The app has other options including the toggles for motion detection, cleaning schedules, maintenance status, function reviews, find my robot and more. The Do Not Disturb mode lets you set a specific time you do not want the robot to run. The cleaning schedule allows you to choose time and cleaning modes. Lucy will stay on the charging dock during the set time. The AI-assisted room mapping is pretty fun, you can name the rooms automatically and assign the rooms to clean. The vacuum can identify the rooms based one previously generated the map. While it is cleaning, you can find the live location of the robot inside your house using the map. There is an arrow navigation key to control on the app, if you want to control the robo-vaccum manually. The suction controls are made easy with the modes for cleaning different surfaces. When you slide the suction control option, it will show you what can you clean up with the current set power. Speaking of smart home support, the Trifo Lucy can go along well with your Alexa or Google Assisantde. Once you link the Trifo with your Alexa account, simply say to your Alexa “Alexa, start Lucy” and it will start vacuuming. For Google users, just ask “Start cleaning” good enough to initiate the Google. You can ask Google to “Charge Lucy” to get back Lucy vacuum Cleaner to the charging dock. The smart support for both platforms are pretty good and the simple commands enough to operate Lucy.
Maintenance and Cleaning
Robot vacuums need proper and regular maintenance to keep them running smoothly over years. After nearly a week of cleaning the household, I decided to clean up the vacuum, from brushes to the dustbin. As you know, for any vacuum cleaner, the cleaning should be easy. the brushed and filters should be able to access easily without any extra tools if possible. One thing I frequently check is the side brush on a vacuum. Trifo Lucy has only one side brush, that too fixed with a screw. This is where mostly the long hair and threads get stuck. If you had gone through our review of iLife’s V9e, that one had plug-and-play side brushes. It was quite easy to remove and snap it back in. But this time with Trifo Lucy, it was quite a task to get rid of those hairs stuck in the side brush. The main roller brush in the suction area is easy to remove with just a pull. Removing the dustbin also felt effortless with the push of a button. The HEPA filter does not need a separate compartment since it is attached to the dustbin itself; that was quite handy though. Cleaning other parts including the front wheel were not a big deal too. The mopping cloth is detachable from the mopping module. I could easily remove the cloth from it and put it in the washer for a quick clean-up. The front-facing camera is crucial for the robot to move and identify objects, so make sure to keep it clean with a soft microfiber cloth.
Battery and Charging
Trifo Lucy offers almost 2 hours of runtime, but the results were varying while we tested it on different surfaces with diffrent suction power. If you have no pets or kids at home, and simply trying to get rid of the dust off of the floor, Lucy is determined to run for around 2 hours. But that is not the case in most households. You would have a rug, pet hairs in some areas, chairs, and table legs blocking its way, and more which will affect a great deal of the battery runtime. With its camera on, you can see around the house anytime anywhere. But that seemed to have reduced battery in my case. While it already uses the camera, watching live visuals puts extra strain on the battery. While the battery was running low, Lucy stopped doing all the vacuuming job and started returning to its base. The robot does not care to avoid any small things on the floor while on the way back to the base. Once the battery is fully charged, which takes less than a couple of hours, Lucy gets back to the job and finishes the remaining parts of your house in no time. Talking of the charging dock, Trifo ships an ordinary charging base station with two pins that get aligned with the connectors on the robot automatically. There is no self-emptying option (maybe that’s too much to ask for its price tag).
Trifo Lucy: Pros and Cons
Key Features: VSLAM based navigation | Motion detection | Intruder alerts | Voice prompts | 3,000 Pa suction power | Night vision | No-Go Zones | Room mapping | Manual controls
AI-based mapping and navigation.Intelligent obstacle avoiding.Realtime home monitoring.Intruder alerts.IR Night vision.
Limited mopping capabilities.Hard to take off mopping attachment.Dust noticeable on shiny black surface.
What’s in the Box
The Trifo Lucy is shipped in a compact package that measures only 15.6 x 18.5 x 6 inches. The robot comes with all the accessories fitted together, ready to run just an app setup away. Here are all the accessories and extras you get with the Trufo Lucy robot vacuum retail package.
Trifo Lucy robot vacuumside brushRolling brushMopping module with clothUser manual
Pricing and Availability
Our Take: Should You Buy Trifo Lucy Robot Vacuum?
The Trifo Lucy robot vacuum is a game changer among the LIDAR-based vacuums out there. Its intelligent surroundings learning and adapting to your household area is quite a flex while your neighbor’s robot vacuum could be found bumping into furniture and kids’ legs more often. Anything larger than an inch is identified by Lucy and is avoided. Another reason to pick this robot vacuum is its home patrolling feature with live camera visuals on your phone. Intruder in your house? Lucy will alert you. With all such smart features, this could be your next robot vacuum for your house. If you ask me, I would have a second thought about its mopping capability. Putting it aside, everything else is worth what you spend. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email.
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