The Yarbo Lawn Mower Pro represents a class of heavy-duty robot lawn mowers designed for large, challenging properties with steep slopes, thick warm-season turf, and complex terrain. Unlike standard robot mowers, it features dual 300W motors delivering up to 2,500 watts of peak power, a 500mm cutting width, and tracked drive capable of handling 70% grade slopes. The system uses RTK GPS correction combined with satellite positioning for precise navigation, and includes modular attachments for towing (227kg capacity), patrol mode, and remote camera monitoring. While expensive at approximately $10,899, this equipment is best suited for commercial properties, golf courses, or large acreages where its industrial-grade build quality and versatility justify the investment, rather than typical suburban residential lawns.
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Yarbo Lawn Mower Pro | The Most Insane Robot Mower I’ve Tested本站添加:
Friends, today we're looking at something that makes most robot mowers feel like they turned up to a job site wearing slippers. This is the Yabo Lawn Mower Pro, and calling it just a robot feels a little bit unfair. This is really a modular yard machine that happens to mow. It has tracks, serious motor power, cameras, towing hardware, app control, patrol features, and depending on the modules you own, it can change jobs across the season. So, this is not the same conversation as a little robot moa quitly nibbling away at a tiny patch of lawn behind a townhouse. Yabo is for people with real grass, real slopes, awkward blocks, thick warm season turf, and the kind of property where lawn care is not a chore. It's an ongoing negotiation. And Yabo's campaign idea is basically no lawn is too wild.
And after using it, I understand why.
This is not just trying to be convenient. It's trying to be powerful.
Big thanks to Yaba for sending this absolute beast over for testing. Join me as we take a full tour of this next level piece of machinery. Tap like and subscribe and let's get started by rolling the intro.
The Yabot lawnmower Pro is a heavyduty mowing setup in the Yabo range. It uses dual 300 W motors for mowing. reaches up to 2 and a half thousand watts of peak mowing power, has 500 mm cutting width for the attachment, and gives you an adjustable cutting height from 20 to 100 mm. That means it can cut low if you need it to, but also gives you enough range to treat warm season lawns properly. And especially here in Australia where you've got buffalo, cooch, kiku, and and similar grasses can be tough. They can be dense and sometimes, frankly, a little bit disrespectful to you. Now, the Pro also runs on tracks, not little plastic wheels. And that means Yabo can handle slopes up to 70% grade or around 35°.
And it has a vertical obstacle clearance of around 25 mm. Then add RTK to it, GPS, vision navigation, multiple cameras, ultrasonic sensors, and a bumper sensor, of course, appased mapping, auto recharge, zone management, remote viewing, and modular attachment.
And this starts feeling less like a robot mower and more like a small robotic groundskeeper that may have military ancestors. But before we get carried away, we really need to talk about what's in the box. Is because when Yabo turns up, you quickly realize this is not a cute appliance. The lawnmower pro package includes the Yamabo core, the mower pro module, the battery, a docking station, accessories, cutting discs and blades, and depending on the kit, you also have the smart assist module, which I have mounted here, the tow hitch, the controller, the data center, cables, mounts, antennas, docking hardware, and enough pieces to make your garage look like you've started a small robotics company. But look, let's start with the data center.
It needs a good open view of the sky and it also needs a wired network connection. However, there is two positives. Yabo uses GNSS satellites for positioning and satellites alone are not the full story here. For the robot to be accurate, it also needs the RTK correction data. Think of the satellites as telling Yabo roughly where it is and the correction data as sharpening that position so the mower can follow the map properly. So with Yabo, there are two ways this can work. You can use local RTK correction through the Yabo data center, which acts like a base station, or in supported areas, you can use the cloud or public entrip correction over Wi-Fi or the in-built 4G. So it's not really a satellites versus the data center. It's more about where the correction data comes from. The benefit of the end troop is that the data center placement can be less restrictive for large properties, but the robot still needs GNS satellites and correction data working together to mow accurately. Now, with that in mind, let's talk about the weight. This thing is heavy. The core alone is 60 kilos and with the mower module attached, it's around 90 kilos.
So, if your plan was to casually lift this into the back of the car like a cordless trimmer, I have terrible news for you. You feel that size everywhere when it turns, when it reverses, when it moves over things, especially when you have to plan out your routes. And this is why the included controller is not a gimmick. With something this big, being able to manually drive it around makes the whole experience much better. Now, once you understand the modular idea, the weight starts to make a lot more sense. This is not just a mower. It is one powered platform designed to take on multiple jobs. There are other mowers out there, but very few are trying to combine track drive, seasonal attachment, towing, patrol features, cameras, remote access, and proper Boeing power into well, one ecosystem.
So, let's talk about what I actually got to test, and that is the mower module along with the smart assist module that's mounted here, and the tow hitch.
So, let's start with towing because this is where the Arbo starts feeling very different from a mower. And I need to really stress this, how powerful this robot is. With a tow hitch attached, Yabo can pull useful loads around the property. And I really mean useful. Now, Yaba's official everyday towing capacity is around 227 kilos, which means small garden carts, yard tools, mulching equipment, bins, and well, general property stuff. But do not confuse this giant pool force number with safe everyday towing. Your mower is not a Land Cruiser and nobody wants an insurance claim starring a robot lawn tank. In my testing, I attached it to an old trailer with a toolbox on top, which was still full of tools. And to my great surprise, it worked really well. I could pull it, reverse it, aim it, turn it, and do it all on a slopped driveway.
That was genuinely impressive. And the smart assist module adds even more personality. With this module, Yaba can do things like follow me, patrol mode, waypoint navigation, remote live viewing, and two-way audio if you need to speak to somebody on the other side of your acreage property. The camera system gives you more remote visibility through the app. And Yabo says it can stream over 4G. The first time you look through the cameras on your phone and move it around and use it like a little property scout, it does feel futuristic.
Excessive, yes. Slightly ridiculous, yes, but still futuristic. And follow me is also fun, but it needs a warning.
Yavo labels it as a beat to feature, and this is not the time to walk around like you have hired a perfectly sensible robot assistant that makes flawless life choices. It follows you with a purpose, but beware of bushes and sprinklers and garden ornaments. It'll just go straight through them. Now, mowing. This is where the Pro really starts to justify why it exists. And the cutting setup is serious. The Pro uses dual 300 watt mowing motors up to 2 and a half,000 watts peak power and 500 mm of cutting width. And there you've got the two blade option. You can have the cutting discs as much as you want, but you really want to use the morting blades with this power. Yo says the straight blades are designed for tougher mowing and finer chopping, better durability, too, and less clogging in thick or wet grass. And a lot of Robert Moors are fine when the lawn is already under control. But then you get a few warm days, some retick, maybe a bit of rain, and suddenly the grass decides it's auditioning for Jurassic Park. The Yabo does not feel like it is politely asking the grass to cooperate. In use, the mowing patterns look deliberate. It cuts in planned lines rather than wandering around randomly like it's looking for its keys. and the 500 mm cutting width helps covering big areas quicker with less battery required. Now, Yabu says it can cover about 6 acres per week, which means obviously multiple mowing cycles per day, which usually ends up around 120 minutes per charge. But the good thing is the auto recharge function on a wireless pad only takes about 90 minutes from 20% to 80, which is pretty darn quick for a wireless pad. But I wouldn't worry too much about the numbers because once you've got everything set up, you can set different zones to be done in different days and times, which means your mowing frequency is probably what you need to plan out and how it's going to get around any complex areas. So on a large open lawn, it makes sense on tight chopped up areas. It has to spend more time turning around, but the robot is powerful enough to make it over many hills and any holes. Now, obstacle avoidance is another big part of the Pro story. It uses cameras, ultrasonic sensors, and bumper sensor to detect objects and work around them. It can slow down, avoid, and rejoin the mowing path later, so you don't have to worry about it not making that corner and missing a spot. And when everything is mapped up properly, it feels incredibly accurate. But did I run into any issues?
Yeah, I did. And honestly, most of the use actually came down to the size and the environment, not necessarily the robot itself. In my suburban home, where the spaces are tighter, the turning room is less forgiving. Yo can feel like bringing a small tracked vehicle into a space that really wants something half the size. It wants room and also wants sky visibility. It wants turning space.
It wants a layout that lets it behave like Yabo instead of consistently shredding itself through awkward corners. But if your yard is full of narrow gaps, tight borders, raised garden beds, fences, overhanging trees, retick heads, and little fussy areas, you may still need to grab a whipper snipper and clean up some of those areas. Let's be honest, it's not perfect, and it can only reach a certain area with the blades anyway. And when I tested it as much on a larger property, the whole machine made far more sense to me. I know it probably already does to you, but on bigger areas where there's hills, rough ground, sand, mud, open turning spaces, and more room for it to move and use its power, the mowing system comes together. That is where you stop thinking, "Wow, this is huge." And start thinking, "Okay, now I understand why it has been built this way." The tracks give it grip. The weight gives it stability. The motor power gives it confidence. And the modular system means it is not just sitting there waiting for the next mow. It can tow. It can patrol.
You will use it every day to manage your property. Can you see what I'm getting here? This is industrial equipment and the build quality feels like it, too.
The mower module feels tough. The blades are real blades, not decorative little spinning butter knives. and the tracks, the sensors, the bumper underside, the the cutting discs, and the even the straight blades all need to be treated with respect and understanding. Now, the price, you may want to sit down for this one. It's on the Yaba Australia website. The Lawnmower Pro, this package right here is 10,899 on sale down from 11,999. This is a massive amount of money for lawn equipment. It is the kind of price where your bank account looks at you, looks at the mower, and quietly asks whether everything is okay at home. But if you own a golf course, then it makes way more sense. So, it's expensive for a suburban home. For a business, it's not.
This is not an impulse buy, of course, unless your impulse control is currently on annual leave, but it's not a mower.
It's a platform. The core here enables you to do more. So, if you have a small, simple lawn, I do not think this is a machine for you. It's too much weight, too much setup, too much money, and too much hardware for a job that a small robot probably could handle. If you run a business with massive grass patches, if you have a golf course, if you have an incredibly large acreage, then yes.
And all these modular features, they're continually adding more. So, well, once you get into the ecosystem, you could grow into it. But ultimately, you have to decide what you need it for. Because it's powerful equipment at a high price, so it needs to provide you a return on investment, not just save time.
Remembering the machine is heavy, tight suburban spaces are a no-go. It'll feel oversized. Edge cleanup is still needed depending on where it's mowing. And I think some owners will absolutely find the system more demanding than they expected. But there are people who are going to find this that it makes their life 10 times easier. Overall, the YBA lawn mower is unlike anything I've tested before. Friends, thank you very much for watching. I'll leave you with the official links to the website where you can check price and of course specs and all the other incredible attachments in this ecosystem. Huge thanks to Yabo for sending this across.
It's just wild that this now exists.
We're we're living through an incredible age of ingenuity. Let me know what you guys think because I know this one's going to split people in either genuinely ridiculous or you need one immediately. Make sure to like and subscribe and I'll catch you in the next one. Bye for now.
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