Eufy RoboVac L70 Hybrid

Eufy RoboVac L70 Hybrid

Brand: eufy

SRR score: 170

Eufy RoboVac L70 Hybrid Specs & Features

🧭 Navigation
Mapping / Path planning Yes
Mapping Sensor Type LDS
High-Precision Map Yes
Objects recognition (front camera) No
Magnetic/Optical Virtual Walls No
Barrier-cross Height 20 mm / 0.79 in
Сleaning Area 250 / 2691 ft2
Anti-drop / Cliff Sensor Yes
🧹 Cleaning Features
Suction Power 2200 Pa
Dustbin Capacity 500 ml / 16.91 oz
Automatic Dirt Disposal No
Disposable dustbag capacity N/A
HEPA filter Yes
Washable Filter Yes
Side Brushes (one or two) 1
Carpet Boost Yes
Dirt Sensor No
Full Dustbin Sensor No
🧽 Mopping features
Wet Mopping Yes
Electric water flow control Yes
Water Tank Capacity 45 ml / 1.52 oz
Vibrating mopping pad No
Automatic mop lifting No
Auto water tank refilling No
Auto mop washing No
🔋 Battery
Battery Capacity 5200 mAh
Battery life 150 min
Recharge & Resume Yes
Charging Time N/A
Autocally Docks and Recharges Yes
Rated Power (Watts) N/A
⚙ Usability & Control
Wi-Fi / Smartphone App Yes
Scheduling Yes
IR/RF Remote Control Yes
Wi-Fi Frequency Band 2.4 GHz
Amazon Alexa Support Yes
Google Assistant Support Yes
Display No
Voice Prompts Yes
Noise Level 64 dB
📱 App Features
Real-time tracking Yes
Digital Blocked Areas Yes
Zoned cleaning Yes
Multi-floor maps No
Manual movement control Yes
Selected Room Cleaning No
No-mop zones Yes
Other Specifications
Weight 3.8 kg / 8.38 lbs
Width 35.5 cm / 13.98 in
Height 10.1 cm / 3.98 in
In the box charging base, AC power adapter, waterproof pad, mopping module (with washable mopping cloth), quick installation guide and manual, welcome guide, 12-month warranty
Release Date August, 2019
Warranty 12 months

Updated: Dec 19, 2024. If you found any errors or you have a new device suggestion, please leave a comment below.

Features Chart

* SRR Score is a cumulative score of all robot vacuum features from our database. It doesn't represent the cleaning performance in real-world conditions, quality & reliability of the product.

Eufy RoboVac L70 Hybrid Video Review

Looking for a Eufy robot vacuum but don't know which model is best for you? Check out our Eufy comparison article with all the differences between the Eufy models.


12 comments
su ⋅ 5 years ago #

A lot of times reviews do not make it clear if the robot vac comes with a regular remote control. A fair number of people do not own cell phones so this is important to know.

Mark Tennent ⋅ 5 years, 2 months ago #

My L70 has lived with me for a couple of months. She is called ‘Elsie’ to differentiate her on Amazon Alexa, from her partner Eufy 15C ‘Max’, also a brilliant robotic cleaner. Elsie is absolutely fantastic at her job. Far better than I ever imagined and capable of keeping my floors very clean.

I’ve put a long review on Amazon UK where others are also saying how good the L70 is proving to be at both vacuum cleaning and mopping. Where Max tended to get lost in my house where rooms lead off rooms, Elsie has mapped it all and knows exactly where she is. Max copes far better upstairs where all rooms lead off a central corridor.

Natalie Red ⋅ 5 years, 2 months ago #

Glad to know you are happy with your L70. Do you have pets? How does the robot handle hair? Is the app stable? How accurate mapping is?

Would love to know more about this robot since there is not much information around.

Mark Tennent ⋅ 5 years, 2 months ago #

We don't have pets but I bake bread every other day so the kitchen floor gets messy. The L70 Hybrid B2C usually goes around the kitchen and breakfast room every morning and evening to pick up crumbs and so on. Suction power and brushes are easily strong enough to get pet hairs.

The Eufy L70 Hybrid is an amazing machine. It was never meant to take over the vacuuming, just supply a quick brush up between going round with a manual vacuum cleaner. However it has proven to be well able to take up the role and my floors are cleaner than they ever have been.

Set-up
Initial set-up is easy and when first started the Eufy L70 will have a quick look round, turning on the spot left and right to get a rudimentary map. Then it refines this as it cleans each room in turn. As it reaches a doorway it has a quick look through to make a simple map, before finishing cleaning the room it’s in.

Watching the L70's problem-solving is fascinating especially if you move things after the L70 has passed by (would I do that on purpose … err, yes). I guess there must be a fast CPU on board because the L70 will look at the problem with its LIDAR, have a little roll each way before deciding what it is going to do. Then it trundles off, often at a fast lick. It goes around the edges first then sets about the rest of the room, dealing with objects on the way or having a quick look into any adjoining rooms.

Once it has mapped an area it even curves round bends, table legs and through tight gaps, hardly slowing for them. Both of my Robovacs have taken a fancy to our sisal door maps, giving them extra special attention and sucking extra hard.

Among the various instruction booklets is a Fast Set-up Guide. This needs to show how to turn down the Lady’s voice who shouts at you to tell you what instruction has been received or the problem the L70 has encountered. With a start-up chime/music that sounds like it plays through a birthday card’s speaker at full volume. I have mine set to 25% volume and can still hear her two rooms away.

As far as I am concerned Eufy Robovacs do not identify as female and are very obviously male, as probably are most of the people who purchase a robotic vacuum cleaner. Renaming in the Eufy home app is easy and it's best to keep the name Alexa-friendly or else for example: 'Robovac Leo' will get confused as Robovac Cleo by Alexa. The L70 has a very annoying female voice so how can you give it a male’s name?

Perhaps it could be one that serves both sexes: Steve, Lesley, or Chris maybe? Or one of those non-human names much-loved by the glitterati: River, Chelsea or Vignette perhaps? ‘Alexa, tell Nausea to start sucking.’ In the end I relented and used the first and last letter of her model name L70 Hybrid B2C, aka Elsie.

Return to base
After all the areas have been cleaned and it is time to return to base, the L70 makes its way home automatically. This can also be as power is running low (a good 2 or 3 hours), after an order is sent via Alexa, or via the Eufyhome app, or even by pressing the home button on top of the robot. The L70 does this intelligently, avoiding all the obstacles it knows about and using its map to navigate via the shortest route, crossing rooms diagonally.

The L70 mapped and cleaned the downstairs of my house for the first time in 73 mins. Now it cleans the same area in less than 50 minutes. As with all robot vacuum cleaners, It helps to make rooms robot-friendly by putting chairs on tables, moving shoes with laces, keeping electric flexes out of reach and making a wide enough path for the Robovac to get through. The L70 needs 106mm height by about 400mm width, although it can squirm its way through slightly narrower gaps.

Mopping
Mopping is surprisingly good with the water tank large enough to mop nearly all it can reach of the wooden floors for the whole of my ground floor I want cleaned (approx 70 sqm). Even set to release the least water, the L70 leaves a broad path of clean, damp floor behind and you can set it to just mop and not vacuum as well. When water runs out, the Lady will shout she needs more water, an message is sent via smartphone and the L70 returns to base for a refill (manual).

Benefit of a mapping cleaner
‘Elsie's’ brother ‘Max’ a Eufy 15C Max I bought before the L70, who now lives upstairs and cleans the bedrooms. Max is a fine Robovac but had a few problems with the large and complicated area of my house, with rooms leading off rooms. Even so he can vacuum the downstairs in two hours, albeit in a bouncy fashion. Max gets under furniture 'Elsie' can only look at even though she has a good try at getting through.

Eufyhome App
The Eufyhome app is letting the L70 down a little. The app also needs to run in landscape especially on tablets where it is far easier to work with than on a cell phone screen. Restricting where the L70 does and doesn’t clean is done in the Eufyhome app. but you cannot save individual maps and must define the areas to be cleaned or avoided each time. Or use the ones you've already set up. Strangely, the cleaning history does show the areas you've prviously defined but there isn't any way to select the same for current use.

Restricted areas, virtual walls and areas to not mop, can be saved. One has to drag on-screen rectangles which can be awkward if the L70's mapped your rooms at an angle as mine did first. It meant drawing overlapping rectangles defining areas to clean or avoid rather than setting corner points with the Eufyhome app automatically connecting them up. Also, it is too easy to accidentally make a rectangular zone slightly too large and overhanging into an adjacent room. The L70 will obligingly try to clean the tiny overlap area in that room. A remap fixed this and straightened the map. Often it is easier to just close doors restricting the L70s entry.

Eufy back-up
The back-up from Eufy is second to none with fast responses to queries and a variety of ways to contact them. They have offices in the US, UK and Germany, with repair services arriving 'in the near future.’

In answer to my queries Eufy’s UK Customer Services responded: ‘I understand you[r] need about naming zones. I have forwarded your suggestion to our product team already. Rest assured we keep improving our products and app and we will consider adding this function in our future models. As for the voice, actually it is picked up by some customers in a survey. I have already forwarded your suggestion about the voice and identification to our software team. In the future, there would be more voice pack options.’

One of the options in the Eufyhome app is to update the Firmware so this may be a possibility.

Other features
Apart from the weaknesses of the Eufyhome app, there aren’t many problems to report. When either of my Robovacs get into a spot of bother, it will try to fix things before sending an alert via smartphone, and the L70 lady shouts an announcement. Then the stuck Robovac switches off. You can find them easily from the Eufyhome App which shows their location. Being Internet connected it is possible to send them instructions over the Internet and watch their progress, even steering them manually using the Eufyhome map.

One sunny day I watched Elsie get caught in a corner when a strong shadow was left with two brightly lit areas each side. Elsie identified the shadows as objects it couldn’t get around and instead tried to push through the walls of the corner it was stuck in, before calling for help.

Another time as Elsie was doing a clean, she was going at such a speed she managed to climb the threshold into my conservatory, somewhere I had not set-up for cleaning. You might need to keep doors to the outside closed unless you want your Robovac tackling the whole world as they are keen to try. When outside doors are open the L70 will have drawn a rudimentary map through the open doorway, as far as the LIDAR can reach. Upstairs, 15C 'Max' can trundle along the corridor going so fast he almost goes over a step down into the room at the end. His fall detectors stop him just in time but leave him stranded like the coach in The Italian Job and he has to call for help.

Natalie Red ⋅ 5 years, 2 months ago #

Wow, it is a very deep and informative review indeed! May I ask your permission to post this review on our forum or if you would like to you can do it yourself. Your personal experience using the L70 would help our readers to decide on a robot vacuum. Also, you would maybe answer our readers' questions that might come up after posting a review, etc.

Mark Tennent ⋅ 5 years, 2 months ago #

Glad to help. I found your site when I too was looking into robovacs.

Do what you like with it and please correct any typos and smelling pisstakes you find. I based it on the review I left on Amazon, which I edited and posted to you. Do you need some images to accompany? I’m a little busy right now but can send some early next week at the latest. I will try to answer any questions as well.

Kendra Nickerson ⋅ 5 years, 3 months ago #

The l70 hybrid has virtual walls, they are called no go zones in the app. You can set separate no mop zones as well. The no go zones work really well.

Natalie Red ⋅ 5 years, 3 months ago #

Oh, thank you! I could not find it anywhere.

Wayne ⋅ 3 years, 5 months ago #

The only issue I have with this unit, is that it can't same more than one map. If I have it set my for my main floor, and have no go zones all configured, once I move it upstairs, it deletes all that and starts renavigation. Minor and I love the unit, but just wish it saved more than one map.

Mark Tennent ⋅ 5 years, 3 months ago #

Your chart above states that the Eufy L70 does not return and automatically dock with its base. According to the reviews I have been reading, prior to purchasing, the Eufy L70 does have return to base and automatic recharging before completing cleaning from where it left off.

Michael ⋅ 5 years, 3 months ago #

Hi Mark,
thanks for noticing and reaching out! Sorry for the mistake, of course, it has this feature, I've fixed the chart.
Have you already got the L70? What is your thought about it? There is a lack of info/reviews about this robot vacuum at this moment, so I appreciate any feedback about it.

Mark Tennent ⋅ 5 years, 3 months ago #

Hi Michael

The L70 isn't available in the UK until the end of August (which is a few days away). I have decided to buy a Eufy Vac for the back-up they offer and it'll either be the 15C or the L70.

Mark

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