The Electrolux Trilobite is a robotic vacuum cleaner manufactured by the Swedish corporation Electrolux. It takes its name from the extinct arthropod, which scoured the ocean's floor. The prototype cleaner was first seen on the BBC television programme, Tomorrow's World, in May 1996, when it was demonstrated by presenter Philippa Forrester (actually announced by press release in the UK on 1 Dec 1997 [1]). It was the world's first commercially available autonomous vacuum cleaner, introduced as a product in 2001, model ZA1.[2] A revision was released as Version 2.0 in 2004, model ZA2.
Description
The Trilobite contains a vacuum cleaner and a removable roller brush capable of working on deep-pile carpet. It has the ability to map rooms and avoid obstacles by using ultrasonic sensors (on the Mark 2 model also infrared). It recharges itself on a charging base, which it automatically finds when has completed its cleaning task or its power runs low. The Trilobite will indicate when the dustbin needs to be emptied.
Its ultrasonic sensors allow it to come within 1" of objects without colliding with them. This object detection is fairly reliable, but sometimes fails if the robot approaches an object with a sharp corner. In this case, the ultrasonic beam is not reflected, and the Trilobite will gently bump into the object. Because the Trilobite stops a short distance from walls and other objects, it leaves small areas that are not fully cleaned.
Magnetic strips are used to block off areas that the Trilobite should not enter, and infrared sensors (on the Mark 2 model) protect it from falling down stairs or off ledges.
Electrolux has discontinued the Trilobite, removing any product information from its website, referencing instead its Wikipedia page for information.
In September 2016, Electrolux introduced the successor to the Trilobite, the MotionSense. An international version of the teaser video was released on January 9, 2017.[3]
Patents describing features of the Trilobite
See also
References
- ↑ "Electrolux Unveils Prototype For Robot Vacuum Cleaner". electrolux.se (Press release). 11 July 2000. Archived from the original on 18 June 2001.
- ↑ "A vision becomes reality". electrolux.se. 12 February 1998. Archived from the original on 9 April 2001.
- ↑ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Electrolux MotionSense robotic vacuum cleaner. YouTube.
- ↑ WO patent 02067744A1, "Wheel support arrangement for an autonomous cleaning apparatus"
- ↑ WO patent 1997040734, "Autonomous device"
- ↑ US patent 7647144, "Obstacle sensing system for an autonomous cleaning apparatus"
- ↑ US patent 5935179, "System and device for a self orienting device"
External links
- Electrolux Trilobite homepage (archived copy of trilobite.electrolux.com)
- Everyday Robots Review: Electrolux Trilobite Robotic Vacuum Archived 29 April 2005 at the Wayback Machine
- Answers to Why the Trilobite Vacuum Robot is Expensive Archived 18 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- BBC1 television listings for Friday 10 May 1996