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Find Z60 Ultra Roller Complete — review of a robot vacuum with floor washing, 28,000 Pa suction, and threshold crossing

Find z60 ultra roller complete review of a robot vacuum with floor washing 28000 pa suction and threshold crossing

Trouver Z60 Ultra Roller Complete — review of a robot vacuum with floor washing, 28,000 Pa suction, and threshold crossing

Robot vacuums have long become a familiar part of household life. Today, it's hard to be surprised by them: automatic mapping, wet cleaning, self-emptying stations — the market has long digested all that. Therefore, you start to approach new models a bit more pragmatically. What's interesting is not the promises on the box, but how the device behaves in a real home after weeks of use.

I've lived with the Trouver Z60 Ultra Roller Complete for several weeks, and during that time, it confidently transitioned from "new gadget in the house" to a device that simply works on schedule and doesn't require attention. But let's start traditionally with the box and the package contents.

The packaging is large, heavy, and impressive — it makes it perfectly clear that what's inside is not just a "robot vacuum," but a full-fledged system with a self-service station. The box is made of thick cardboard with high-quality printing, without a feeling of being budget or skimping on details. If you're a girl, I wouldn't advise you to try carrying it yourself from the delivery point to the car and home like I did; find yourself a helper for the heavy lifting.

Inside, everything is organized neatly and logically. The robot, station, and accessories are arranged so nothing rattles during transport. The unpacking itself feels more like getting acquainted with a major appliance than with another gadget.

The package contents are pleasantly surprising. Besides the robot itself and the base station, the manufacturer immediately includes a set of consumables, eliminating the need to search for compatible filters, brushes, and other parts in the first few months. This is one of those rare cases where the device truly feels ready for long-term use right "out of the box."

It's worth noting separately that the station already comes equipped with containers for clean and dirty water, and all removable elements are easily accessible. No complex manipulations are required at the setup stage — take it out, plug it in, fill it with water, and the system is ready to go. In the end, the packaging and contents leave a very clear impression: we're dealing with a device from the "set it and forget it" category, without unexpected additional costs or unpleasant surprises at the start.

Let's move on to my experience using the vacuum. The statistics in the app during the usage period are telling: 439 square meters of cleaned area, 682 minutes of work, and 22 completed cleaning sessions. On average, one cycle takes about 70–80 minutes, cleaning roughly 40 square meters. It's important to clarify that this refers to the cleaning area, not the total area of the premises. My space is about 80 square meters, but half of it is occupied by furniture. The robot only counts the zones it could actually drive through, and the numbers look honest. For example, at home, with a floor area of 45 square meters, the robot only cleans 20 of them.

The main flooring is tile, with small rugs and mats placed here and there. In daily life, the robot calmly drives onto them, doesn't get stuck, and doesn't get lost. A couple of times, lightweight rugs did get pushed into a corner — a typical story for any robot if the mat is too light and lacks a non-slip backing. There's no drama in this, but it's a point to consider. However, like most models, it physically cannot move full-sized carpets.

I was particularly interested in the obstacle-crossing system. This is the main feature that made me want to test this device. The specifications claim up to 4.5 centimeters at once and up to 8 cm cumulatively over a short distance, and in one of my rooms, I have a threshold exactly 5 centimeters high. Formally, it's above the spec, but I was trying to figure out how to make one vacuum handle cleaning all my rooms, instead of using two separate ones as I do now.

The solution turned out to be surprisingly simple: I stuck rough anti-slip tape to the edge of the threshold. The robot started gripping the surface confidently and driving over it consistently. Yes, a small trick, but the outcome was crucial for me — now one vacuum cleans all rooms, without the need to keep a second device for the "problem" room. Now what scares me is not the threshold the vacuum has to climb, but how selflessly it throws itself off it to clean the lower room. It heads straight for it right after starting the cleaning cycle and tries to cross it (the threshold) without stopping.

Cleaning starts every morning, and it's in this scenario that the Z60 Ultra shines the most. Large debris simply doesn't have time to accumulate. The floors are always clean, without that "should probably vacuum" feeling. The robot consistently picks up fine dust, spilled cat litter, household debris, hair, and fur. There are several animals in the home, and for such an environment, the device turned out to be quite comfortable. Nothing gets smeared around, there's enough suction power, and the result is pleasantly predictable.

After several weeks of use, I specifically checked the condition of the brushes. All elements were clean: no tangled hair, no familiar "beards" of fur. The anti-tangle system really works. For pet owners, this is one of the key factors.

The main feature of the model is felt precisely in wet cleaning. It uses a roller mop with real-time clean water supply. In theory, it sounds like marketing, but in practice, the difference is noticeable. The floor isn't just lightly wiped; it's actually washed. There are no streaks, the surface looks clean, and the feeling is closer to light manual washing than to the classic "cloth dragged behind a vacuum." The water circulation system and simultaneous collection of dirty liquid make the cleaning neater — dirt isn't smeared across the floor again. I assessed the cleaning quality by the amount of dirty water in the tank, which is regularly flushed from the mop; now there's much more of it than with the robot that used to run here before.

I haven't tried cleaning dried-up stains, and the reason is simple: with daily dry and wet cleaning, they simply don't have time to appear. And that's perhaps the most honest indicator of such a device's effectiveness — it works proactively. If someone cleans the house every day, where would old, stubborn dirt come from?

In terms of noise level, the Z60 Ultra behaves exactly as you'd expect from a modern robot vacuum. It's not quiet as a mouse, but it's not...