OpenMower – Open-source robot lawn mower [video](youtube.com) |
OpenMower – Open-source robot lawn mower [video](youtube.com) |
The hard part was making it look nice. The people that pay high prices for lawn care want it to look it a certain way. I couldn’t get over that hurdle.
I could but it would’ve been me driving over the already cut grass with specific grooming tools, and effectively negating any benefits of me over traditional labor.
I really think this tech is the future, and I’m glad there’s FOSS solutions to get hobbyists 90% of the way. The last 10% is going to be the real struggle for a startup.
Then use your revenues to iterate on a version for people that want a lawn that looks like plastic.
The only downside is that I'd need decent monitoring to alert me that I need to intervene before a serious mow is needed.
A very small nitpick: OpenMower is not FOSS as it's restrictively licensed prohibiting commercial use (https://github.com/ClemensElflein/OpenMower/blob/main/LICENS...).
Autonomous lawn mowers are everywhere in my neighborhood, albeit being quite expensive. Some even have two for front and back.
Unless you have a very big yard or a very small yard it is quite literally "the thing to have" right now.
This is a huge market in central Europe.
Then use an algorithm to get the stripes in the right places.
Of course a person is allowed to license their software however they like. However, I might also note that creative commons is not recommended as a license for code: https://creativecommons.org/faq/#can-i-apply-a-creative-comm....
Not saying that it cannot work, but this has so much hurdles to overcome before being something that can work, let alone be produced (at home) or mass-produced and sold, that its at most "really interesting".
If you just wanted to switch between a small number of pre-set heights (and changing those heights could be manual), a cam arrangement is probably better.
The goal is to have an electric rope mower for the biggest part of my back yard that happens to have a 110v outlet in the very center (septic alarm pedestal).
Maybe a full size riding mower would have something automated there? So you'd turn that into a robotic one?
Using that primitive, you can make a lawn mower.
wow, that's awesome (I mean, the whole project is awesome, but that's an especially user friendly touch)
I think a sickle style mower is the future of electric mowers as they use less energy per blade of grass cut
I have half-finished contraption on my garage desk, consisting of hoverboard electronics and motors (cheapest battery, motor, power electronics combo), PX4 autopilot and a spinning disc with Husqvarna razorblades as cutter. Time will tell if I muster enough energy to deal with the rest of the plan this summer- Raspberry Pi running ROS and Kinect for SLAM.
Right now though, it's just a scary RC vehicle capable of doing wheelies (hoverboard motors have a lot of torque).
The idea of a little robot mower "mountain climbing" by hooking a spike into the ground and using a pulley amuses me.
Even if you can establish a perennial crop, the native grass can still creep back in and outcompete it. And if it can keep the grass down, the cover crop necessarily will grow enough to create the aforementioned problems with pests. You still gotta mow it periodically to keep everything under control.