18/07/2025
🔍 Top 3 Questions About M1 – Answered!
1️⃣How do I know how many zones my lawn has?
Many people are unsure how to divide their lawn into zones. A common question is: “If a section of my lawn is fenced but has a gate, does that count as a separate zone?” The answer is no — as long as the gate is open and M1 can physically pass through without needing Multi-Zone Markers, the areas are treated as the same zone.
Zones should only be considered separate when they are completely disconnected by non-grass areas — like a driveway, sidewalk, or patio. For example, if Lawn Area 1 is on one side of your house and Lawn Area 2 is on the opposite side with no connecting grass in between, those are two zones.
To let M1 travel between such zones, simply place Multi-Zone Markers at the edge of each area. These create a virtual path over non-grass surfaces, allowing M1 to move between zones autonomously.
2️⃣What's the difference between the Boundary and No-Go markers?
M1 has built-in edge recognition, which means it can naturally detect the boundary between grass and non-grass surfaces (like pavement or walls). However, in cases where there’s no clear physical boundary, that’s where No-Go Markers come in.
For example, if your lawn blends directly into your neighbor’s with no fence or visual separation, M1 won’t know where to stop—so you place a No-Go Marker to create a virtual boundary and prevent it from crossing over.
So to clarify:
Boundary detection is automatic when there’s a clear edge.
No-Go Markers are used when there’s no natural separation and you want to define a virtual limit.
3️⃣Does M1 leave visible grass clippings on the lawn?
M1 is designed to work frequently and intelligently, trimming just 3–4 mm of grass per session. When M1 is set to mow daily, the clippings are extremely fine, fall deep into the lawn, and decompose quickly—functioning just like a mulching mower. In this mode, you’ll barely see any clippings at all.
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