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You've got a hillside, a terraced backyard, or a property that rolls down toward a lake — and you're not sure a robot is going to handle it without tumbling into the neighbor's yard.
This is the question we get most often from homeowners who are seriously considering a robot mower but haven't pulled the trigger yet.
There are plenty of Segway Navimow reviews written by tech bloggers who ran the mower on a flat suburban lawn in California for two weeks. This isn't that.
If you're a Minnesota homeowner researching robot mowers, this is probably one of the first questions you're asking.
Segway Navimow i vs X3 vs H Series: Best Robotic Lawn Mower
The 2026 Navimow lineup introduced lowering kits that bring cut height down to 0.80 inches — and 0.40 inches on the Teranox. Here's what that means for warm-season grass owners.
Minnesota's weather is unpredictable. Here's how Navimow's 2026 weather adaptive system handles rain, frost, cold temperatures, and the unexpected storms common in the Twin Cities.
Navimow's 2026 anti-theft system adds Apple Find My integration and a dedicated backup battery that tracks the mower for 3–6 months after the main battery is removed.
Tree canopy has always been the biggest barrier to robot mowing in established Twin Cities neighborhoods. LiDAR technology in 2026 changes what's possible.
Robot mower slope capability has jumped dramatically in 2026. Here's what the new ratings mean, which models handle what, and how Minnesota terrain factors in.
Most AWD robot mowers damage turf on turns. The Navimow X4's zero-turn steering changes that. Here's what Minnesota homeowners need to know.
Both are compact Navimow i-series mowers, but LiDAR and all-wheel drive solve completely different problems. Here's how to choose.
The X4 AWD offers 40-degree slopes, dual cut discs, and patented zero-turn AWD that doesn't tear up your turf. The full review for Minnesota homeowners.
The H2 LiDAR combines LiDAR and Network RTK for mixed environments. For Minnesota yards with partial shade, mature trees, and up to half an acre, it's the sweet spot.
The i2 LiDAR uses vision-only navigation with no GPS or antenna. For older Twin Cities neighborhoods with mature trees, it changes what's possible.