Does it explain the mechanism?
Readers should leave understanding why a robot hesitates on mirrors, not merely which app icon to tap. We diagram airflow at the brush roll, not just repeat peak Pascal from a brochure.
ABOUT US
About CleanTech Rover — independent editorial team publishing in-depth robot vacuum guides on navigation, suction, mopping, and smart-home maintenance for global readers.
OUR STORY
Robot vacuums became household infrastructure faster than buying advice matured. CleanTech Rover was built to close that gap: we translate LiDAR firmware, sealed suction paths, and dock chemistry into calm English guides that renters in Berlin, pet owners in Portland, and first-time buyers in Singapore can all use without wading through affiliate listicles.
We are not a retailer, not a forum, and not a social feed. We are a small editorial desk obsessed with measurable behavior—decibel curves at 50 cm, map recovery after furniture moves, and whether a HEPA claim survives a real pet season.
Read MoreCLEANTECH ROVER
Every article starts with a mechanism—how cliff sensors see black rugs, why Pascal ratings lie on carpet, or when vibrating mop plates risk engineered wood. Recommendations follow physics, not sponsorship.
Read MoreEditors read service manuals, track OTA release notes, and document maintenance intervals in plain calendars. When we measure noise or runtime, we publish the test distance, floor type, and firmware version beside the number.
Affiliate storefronts, paid SKU placement, and recycled “top ten” grids without failure modes. If a robot overheats when filters clog, that limitation appears in the same paragraph as its LiDAR praise.
Expatriates furnishing rentals, allergy-sensitive families evaluating sealed bins, smart-home integrators comparing Matter support, and enthusiasts debating dToF versus camera SLAM before a four-figure purchase.
Firmware changes mapping overnight. Email v73146180@gmail.com with your model and OTA build—we timestamp revisions and explain what changed, not just that a chart moved.
CLEANTECH ROVER
A robot should disappear into your week: scheduled hard-floor passes after breakfast, carpet boost only when rooms are empty, and dock bags changed before odor compounds. We teach the habits and hardware choices that make that realistic.
EDITORIAL PROMISE
Readers should leave understanding why a robot hesitates on mirrors, not merely which app icon to tap. We diagram airflow at the brush roll, not just repeat peak Pascal from a brochure.
Advice must work without proprietary accessories unavailable in your market. Metric measurements lead; imperial equivalents follow where they aid comprehension.
Stairs still require human planning. Black rugs still confuse IR cliffs. We document workarounds and risks with the same clarity as features—because silence on limits wastes money.
No social campaigns, no comment-platform drama, no retailer hotlines. Editorial contact lives at v73146180@gmail.com—for corrections, methodology questions, and collaboration on educational content only.