Who says that a robot vacuum cannot be a statement piece? Although it may not be recognized by Rumba or Roborock, Dream is quietly creating some of the best (and most attractive) robot vacuum/mops for the last few years, and its new flagship model- X50 Ultra— You expect all the features from a top-line unit (with a value for the match). It was better in some of my most difficult tests than any other Robovac to date, but it also hit some snags on the way.
See x50 Ultra on Amazon
For the beginning, the X50 Ultra today looks like every other high-end robovac on the market. Seriously, it has great similarity for Roborock’s Saros 10, I think it is just the same vacuum with different labeling. Even it has the same retracting lidar turret, which also surprises me whether all these are made in the same factory. On one hand, the vacuum’s docking station looks smooth and modern. I would call it the most attractive that I have tested till date, which is good because 13.4 x 18 x 23 inches, it will be somewhat prominent in your home. Dock 176-Digry Fahrenheit can wash the MOP pads of the vacuum with water, which is good for killing bacteria. Two water reservoirs (for a clean and one dirty) are both massive, and for three weeks of my test, I never had to change them. It also comes with a disposable vacuum bag pre-installed and a small reservoir of floor cleaning solutions.
Dream X50 Ultra
If you can fill the price of the price, the Dream X50 Ultra handles vacuuming and moping like a champion.
Professionals
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Excellent vacuum power
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Brush system easily sucks hair and large food bits
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Almost silent moping
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Very good looking dock
Shortcoming
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Struggle to clean on the edges of rooms and furniture
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The other is slower than Robovac, which means a hit for battery life
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expensive
Under the vacuum, you will find split, dual roller brush (again, similar to a brush system on a lot of Roborock models), and it can suck a lot on 20,000 PAs, putting it there with the most powerful contestants. The X50 Ultra also contains dual, rotating MOP pads, one of which can be removed from the body to clean close to the walls; MOP pads can separate and live in Aadhaar during vacuum-keval tasks. There is also a sweeper arm with three brushes that can move outwards to help bring the debris into the path of vacuum. A lidar in the bot extends to the front for navigation along with a lidar turret (which retreats when low furniture goes down).
The X50 Ultra set is straightforward – you fill the reservoir of too much clean water, install detergent bottles, and plug it in. Then, you control everything using a fellow app, which needs to scan the QR code under the first robot hood, installing any firmware updates and then your home mapped. The initial scan of my apartment was very early. The X50 Ultra did not drive everywhere, so I was worried that it missed some areas, but it managed to account for every square foot. You must spend a few minutes to naming the rooms and edit the divided lines between them, but it is equal to the course with Robovac.

For my first cleaning, I just selected Clinjenius mode, which is the default and its most “intelligent” mode. It suggested that I start with an initial deep clean, which I thought was a good touch, but it did not affect me at all with Gates. For the beginning, the X50 Ultra picked up a wildly disabled route for cleaning my apartment, started with my kitchen (fine) and then driving all the way in the bedroom, leaving several areas in the middle. Then it left in the living room, and so on. Inside the room, the X50 Ultra seemed to ruin a lot of movement, just looked around, wandered in circles, and usually measering. The pattern made on my carpet was just randomism. The entire vacuuming took a total of 80 minutes, which was 11 minutes longer than the next fastest vacuum I tested (Roborrock Saros Z70), even on their deepest cleaning mode. While the X50 Ultra made it through my one-bedroom apartment at maximum power, the battery was about 30% below its end. This means that mid-cleaning may have to be prevented and recharged before continuing it in a large house (or you can reduce suction power).
The X50 Ultra also missed a fair amount of dirt on the initial run. I was surprised by how many small bits and pieces were still scattered about the kitchen and hallway, so after the floor dried, I sent the robot back to those areas, but this time on the Max+ vacuum power. Robovac is very loud in that mode, but it managed to suck everything in the middle of the rooms. Unfortunately, the cleaning of the edge was a serious lethargy. Even with its extended sweeper arm, it just missed a ton of a tonne near the walls.
See x50 Ultra on Amazon
Robovac of Dream works a very good job of moping, and it managed to clean three ketchup spots in different stages of drying, as well as some skimp on my floor. Unfortunately, again, it struggled to clean the edges. I dropped some juice on the floor right next to my sink (a normal place for liquid accidents), and this place was originally aligned along the edge of an overhangling cabinet. Somehow it could not find all this, even if it was well within the access of its expandable MOP pad. I would say, however, that moping action is quiet. Some mops on Roborock’s bots shout like Banshi. The X50 Ultra was easily the most cool MOP in a Robovac that I have tested.

Generally, the object recognition on the X50 Ultra is stronger. It carefully avoids an orange USB cord on hard wood, and dodged a white cord on a white rug. Its object detection is not always correct-one time it inflats a black cord on the white rug (which will be the easiest to see), and I had to turn the bot reversed and freed it from the vacuum brush (a very easy, equipment-less affair). The X50 managed to avoid things such as ultra socks and slippers, however, and often on seeing them, are correctly labeling on the map. Dreame claims that the X50 Ultra can identify more than 200 items, and if you want for some reason you can set it to photograph it automatically.
For its most difficult testing, I threw down my notorious snack gout, including goldfish crackers, pumpkin seeds, pistachio shells, some scattered oats, and bits of parsley around the sides of the walls, and I distributed them on hard wood and a medium-pile carpet. There is mostly good news here. The X50 Ultra has performed better than any other robovac that I have tested in areas that have reached it. Almost all bots actually struggle with pistachio shells and choke on them. This bot did not bat one eye, hoisted him easily and quietly. It did not crush or resurrected any goldfish or seeds, which is a common issue. The X50 Ultra also hid some oats under my TV cabinet – some other Robovac I have achieved. The vacuum and the spinning brush system performed incredibly well here.

The X50 Ultra still suffers from the aforesaid edge issues. The cleaning with the walls was spotted (I used dried parsley so that I could clearly see places that were remembered it). Robovac was also inconsistent in corners, almost always leaving at least debris (sometimes more). If a piece of food was an inch or some furniture or within a wall, it completely missed. I put some shells under cabinet overhangs (which could be found below), and Bot also recalled them. This is particularly disappointing because the X50 Ultra performed better than any other vacuum in the open floor.
There are some other excellent features worth mentioning. For the beginning, the X50 Ultra can vault itself on a threshold up to 1.65 inches, the biggest climb for any robovac on the market, and it does with two clever expanded legs that make it up on things. It is good to look at, and it worked well. Voice commands in the X50 Ultra are also correct, so when you can combine it with Google Home, Apple Home, or Alexa, you don’t have to do, and you can give it a very specific command (eg, “Vacuum the Bedroom,” “MOP the Kitchen,” etc.) – and will hope.
© Brent Rose / Gizmodo
© Brent Rose / Gizmodo
© Brent Rose / Gizmodo
I also like that the X50 Ultra leaves its MOP pad on the dock when it does not need them, which should help your rugs to dry. Even if you are both together, the Robovac will increase the MOP pad a full 10.5 mm (0.4 in), which must be sufficient to keep them above the most (non-shag) carpets. It can also reduce its lidar mast, causing the bot to become about 3.5 inches long. Overall, Dream’s fellow app is solid, and while it does not have too much polish as Roborock’s apps, it effectively provides all the functionality that you want, including POV video involving remotely controlling the bot, taking pictures of your pets, and all facilities such as a lot of grain adjusions, such as water should be used, how to use water, how to be a crocodile Needed.
Ultimately, the X50 Ultra is a very good robot vacuum/MOP. Although it is more slower than this, the real thing that protects it from being great with Capital G is its poor performance around the edges, corners and furniture. I would say, however, it appears to be a limit of software instead of hardware, making me some hope that it can be addressed in future firmware updates. But for now, for a robot vacuum that currently sells between $ 1,400 and $ 1,700, I hope that after its main cleaning, any edges by hand will not have to vacuum/MOP.
See x50 Ultra on Amazon