Comments

  • 1-3 of 3
  • Mark Culpepper

    I so do not buy one. I owned one for about 6 months but ultimately had to return it - it just stopped mowing the lawn.when it worked it was a thing of beauty. I would drink a beer and behold the modern advances of man and science. The lawn literally looked and felt like a green carpet. But then one day "mo" (that was its nickname) just wouldn't go. I believe Husqvarna has an issue with signal interference. Took mo back to the dealer and they came out and replaced it with a brand new one - exact same problem. Would just randomly stop in the middle of the lawn and declare "no loop signal". Nothing would fix it and Husqvarna is simply not equipped to troubleshoot these issues. So alas "mo" had to go. Save yourself the heartache. 

  • Mark Culpepper

    There is no new fence or wiring on the property. Literally nothing changed. It just stopped working. I'm happy to work with Husqvarna to solve the issue but support on this product has been absolutely abysmal. It's not the local dealer fault either so don't go down that path - he's excellent but he's not a robotics expert, he's an Internal Combustion Engine expert with specific knowledge of garden care. To expect him to understand why the broadcast signal has interference is about 3 leaps of faith too much.

    Husqvarna had better solve this or this is going to get ugly. At this it's a $2000 product with a two year warranty - and I want my money back. It's too expensive for these types of errors. 
     

     

  • Mark Culpepper

    I have similar issue - I have a relatively new (since last summer) Automower 315 which had been working great, flawlessly on a small back yard lawn. Now it will not complete the lawn. Started out stalling in the middle of the lawn at one very specific spot. Thought it might have just been something it ran into or a similar incident. But now it's done the same thing on another spot. Any answers here? Right now it's an expensive non-functional robot on my lawn which really doesn't work.