Artikle
-
▼
2012
(4042)
-
▼
April
(381)
- Neutrinos could deliver millisecond advantage to c...
- Angry Birds Space hits 50 million milestone, smash...
- Samsung Canada begins rollout of ICS today
- Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th, takes a b...
- Study says wind turbines raise surrounding area te...
- Verizon gets new prepaid plans, adds Jetpack hotsp...
- LightSquared founder Philip Falcone to step down '...
- Apple spits out Android option from Chomp app navi...
- Amazon to collect sales tax, create 2,500 jobs in ...
- Nokia could sell luxury Vertu brand to VC firm for...
- Google Maps 'Cube' game rolls out, back, up, back ...
- GameStop to offer Android tablet and smartphone tr...
- How would you change the LG Nitro HD?
- Apple and Samsung set to meet May 21st, hug it out...
- Mozilla dispatches Firefox 3.6, fills its chair wi...
- Inhabitat's Week in Green: biophotovoltaic table, ...
- NVIDIA unleashes GeForce GTX 690 graphics card, lo...
- Refresh Roundup: week of April 23rd, 2012
- Ask Engadget: best 'money is no object' laptop?
- Engadget Podcast 291 - 04.27.2012
- Acer releases app to hurry the ICS-ification of Ic...
- Origin PC joins the 11-inch, rebadged gaming lapto...
- Space travel coming to an airport near you? Maybe,...
- MIT develops fog resistant, glare-free glass, it's...
- Sony Xperia ST21i with ICS leaks out, shows off it...
- Rocketfish's Sound Prism is triangu-lovely
- Business-minded HP 'Slate 8' tablet surfaces in le...
- Time Warner Cable is preparing for TWC TV IPTV str...
- Mobile Miscellany: week of April 23rd, 2012
- Acer Aspire V3 coming to Japan for $1,100 with rig...
- Leaked Rayman Legends for Wii U trailer showcases ...
- LG gives away 2,000 specially modified phones for ...
- Patterned by Nature: it's big, blocky and earth-ap...
- Nokia experiments with location-based white space ...
- Woz: Windows Phone is 'beautiful,' Android 'no con...
- ShelfX's Vending Fridge nixes the cashier, uses QR...
- Google MapsGL updates 3D buildings, improves virtu...
- AT&T stockholders vote down net neutrality proposal
- Micromax's Superfone A50 Ninja enters India with A...
- Maingear's Pulse 11-inch gaming laptop has designs...
- Dropbox adds automatic photo uploads for Windows a...
- FAA writing rules for electric aircraft, to allow ...
- Fujifilm X-Pro1 mirrorless camera review
- Google Drive now offers a bumpy ride for Chrome OS...
- Leaked T-Mobile roadmap outlines Ice Cream Sandwic...
- PSA: Space Shuttle Enterprise flying over NYC this...
- Panasonic teams up with NHK on 145-inch 8K Super H...
- Distro Issue 38: a peek at the Navy's Robotics Lab...
- LG's IPS monitors head downmarket with 2D-only IPS...
- IRL: gfxCardStatus, Nyko Charge Base 3 for PS3 and...
- TomTom's new sat nav: perfect for your van down by...
- Star Castle finally finds a home on the Atari 2600...
- First image of Sony NEX-F3 leaked, outs 16.1 MP se...
- Samsung applies for patent on emotional recognitio...
- Some Iconia Tab A500s getting Ice Cream Sandwich e...
- Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx hitting the UK in mid-May...
- The Engadget Podcast, live at 5:00PM ET!
- Walmart's website lets you Pay With Cash, strips a...
- Nintendo confirms that it's selling 3DS at a loss,...
- Sony Tablet S gets a wedge of Ice Cream Sandwich
- Google's gunning for web spammers, bans us from me...
- Ubuntu 12.04 LTS Precise Pangolin hits the web, wi...
- Netgear's R6300 router is first to use Broadcom 80...
- NZXT's Cryo E40 laptop cooler sends a pleasant bre...
- Box releases new API for developers, announces 15 ...
- Nintendo posts first annual loss of $460 million, ...
- Harvard tired of overpaying for research, tells fa...
- Koss intros Striva headphone systems, lets you str...
- Former MakerBot exec launches Solidoodle sub-$500 ...
- Lava's Medfield-based Xolo X900 smartphone gets re...
- 15-inch Series 7 Chronos with Ivy Bridge surfaces ...
- President Obama test drives a Sphero on Boulder visit
- Scalado Album launches for Android, we go hands-on...
- HackStore is like Cydia for Mac OS X, replaces wal...
- The Engadget Show 32: ASUS, Huawei and a trip to A...
- Apple's WWDC hitting San Francisco on June 11th
- Project Aether films northern lights at 100,000 fe...
- Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight review
- Google Drive vs. the competition: pricing plans an...
- Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight shipping this wee...
- Firefox 12 now available for download, Windows use...
- Must See HDTV (April 23rd - 29th)
- New Sony iOS docks promise clearer sound thanks to...
- Google Drive official: 5GB of free storage, Chrome...
- Google raises Gmail to 10GB free, 10-times increas...
- NewsFlash uses high-frequency light to transmit da...
- LG's 5-inch Optimus Vu shipping soon in white (in ...
- Onavo Extend stretches your data plan, now with CD...
- BYD intros dual-mode electric Qin vehicle, Remote ...
- Google Doodle celebrates Gideon Sundback, unzips k...
- ST-Ericsson to pass off application processor busi...
- Obama cracks down on Iran and Syria's surveillance...
- Netflix Q1 results: 3 million new streaming subscr...
- Nokia releases Browser 2.0 update for Series 40 ha...
- Ubuntu 12.10 gets christened Quantal Quetzal ahead...
- LG Optimus 3D Max launches in Europe, won't be com...
- Facebook paying Microsoft $550 million for 650 pat...
- China Times: HTC wants to develop its own processo...
- AmazonSupply launches, offers up lab and janitoria...
- First ASUS G55VW gaming laptop configuration spott...
- Skype app won't work on low-end Windows Phone devices
- PSA: Fitbit Aria WiFi scale available now for $130
- UK department store John Lewis launches broadband ...
- Study shows more people watch TV on tablets than c...
- Samsung countdown teases next Galaxy phone with an...
- Virgin and Boost to go 4G, makes Sprint's WiMAX fe...
- New BeoPlay V1 shows up ahead of time, hearts and ...
- HTC talks smartphone design: from inception to fin...
- HTC EVO Design 4G coming to Boost Mobile 'end of t...
- Helium-filled floating wind turbine, renewable ene...
- The Engadget Show is live, here at 6:00PM ET!
- Mobile Miscellany: week of April 16th, 2012
- 3DS firmware update promises folders, less clutter...
- SanDisk profits declining thanks to a 'glut' of fl...
- Huawei Ascend G 132 lands at FCC, unsurprisingly s...
- Inmarsat hands LightSquared a lifeline, hopes to g...
- Ask Engadget: best sub-$150 mechanical keyboard?
- Nokia's White Lumia 900 reportedly available now a...
- ASUS Transformer Prime GPS Extension Kit hands-on
- Sprint discontinues HTC EVO 3D online, limited qua...
- HTC One X available today on Rogers for $170 with ...
- The Engadget Show is live tonight!
- Amazon Germany weighs in on Samsung Galaxy S III w...
- Polaris' pool-cleaning robots get updated with add...
- Fifth Avenue Frogger brings everyone's favorite ro...
- Google Sync for BlackBerry swept away in spring cl...
- Senate black box bill could see 2015 car models sh...
- 500px launches Android app, adds iPad update on th...
-
▼
April
(381)
Home >Unlabelled > Polaris' pool-cleaning robots get updated with added intelligence, four-wheel drive
Polaris' pool-cleaning robots get updated with added intelligence, four-wheel drive
Posted on Saturday, April 21, 2012 by kusanag1
Polaris' pool-cleaning robots get updated with added intelligence, four-wheel drive
It's been almost exactly a year since Zodiac Pool Systems last expanded its line of Polaris-branded pool-cleaning robots, and it's now back with two more additions that fill out the top and bottom end of its lineup. That includes the company's most advanced robot to date, the $ 1499 Polaris 9400 Sport (pictured above), which adds four-wheel drive for the first time, as well as the company's new accelerometer-enhanced ActivMotion Sensor technology -- something Polaris says allows the robot to continually sense where it is in the pool and optimize its cleaning action accordingly. The 9100 Sport, on the other hand, gets neither of those new additions, but it'll "only" set you back $ 799, and will still clean pools up to 40 feet long in about two hours. You can get a closer look at those, as well as the company's existing offerings, at the source link below.
Show full PR text Polaris® Expands Robotic Pool Cleaning Line, Introduces Two New Models To Popular Sport Robotic Platform For 2012
Added intelligence and four-wheel-drive enhance pool cleaner action and maneuverability
ZODIAC POOL SYSTEMS, INC. LOGO Zodiac Pool Systems Logo www.zodiacpoolsystems.com.
SAN DIEGO, April 19, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Zodiac Pool Systems, Inc. is introducing two new models, the Polaris 9400 Sport and Polaris 9100 Sport, to its Polaris advanced Sport Robotic pool cleaner line for the 2012 pool season. The two new models complement the company's popular Polaris 9300 Sport and 9300xi Sport models, and share the platform's patented Vortex Vacuum technology. Polaris has launched a newly revised website to highlight the full family of robotic cleaners as well as its other products: http://www.polarispool.com/
The two new models represent an economical robot in the 9100 Sport and a top-of-the-line 9400 Sport robot that adds ActivMotion Sensor™ intelligence technology. Both cleaners capture more than four times the debris of other cleaners and cost just pennies a day to operate, reducing energy consumption up to 90 percent. The award-winning and sleek Sport Robotic line of cleaners is designed after the look of high-styled sports cars.
The ActivMotion Sensor in the 9400 uses an accelerometer, much like those used in electronic stability control systems in cars, or in smart phone and tablet devices to align the screen vertically or horizontally depending on the angle in which the device is held; the accelerometer automatically senses cleaner position. It measures force t o determine 3-dimensional position, such as deep, shallow, horizontal or vertical, and adapts the pool cleaner for maximum cleaning action. The technology also reduces cord tangling and optimizes the pool cleaning path, even vacuuming in reverse down pool walls, resulting in 20 percent faster cleaning.
According to Kevin Braidic, Zodiac's director of product development, the Polaris 9400 Sport is the most advanced cleaner on the market. "The 9400 Sport continually senses where it is in the pool, optimizing the operation and cleaning action. Pre-programmed cleaning cycles allow consumers to choose between floor-only cleaning or floor, wall and waterline cleaning, a necessary chore that many pool owners just don't want to do manually. And when out of the water, it shuts itself down, making it very safe," says Braidic. "Our innovation team used the newest technology available, making cleaning the pool so easy and energy-efficient that it is no longer any deterrent to owning a pool."
The Polaris 9400 Sport Robot retails for $ 1499. Its features include:
4-wheel drive technology to provide impressive maneuverability over steps and obstacles
ActivMotion Sensor technology to optimize cleaning path and reduce cord tangling
Longer cable to clean up to a 50 foot long pool
Programmable cleaning time choices of 1.5 or 2.5 hours
The Polaris 9100 Sport robot is a good economical option as a robot that retails for $ 799, and is appropriate for pools up to 40 feet long. It has a 2-hour cleaning cycle, is lighter weight, and is especially good at cleaning the pool floor and cove. Features shared by both the Polaris 9400 Sport and the Polaris 9100 Sport, as well as the Polaris 9300 and 9300xi Sport models, are:
Patented Vortex Vacuum technology that maximizes vacuum power without losing suction and captures more debris
Top-access quick release filter canister for easy emptyi ng of debris without touching it
Faster navigation and enhanced agility
Rear water propulsion system that blows debris off stairs and out of tight corners
High energy efficiency; both cost just pennies a day to operate
The Polaris Sport Robotic platform cleaners go into the pool only when cleaning is required as they are not attached to a stationary water outlet; therefore, pool owners can use the robotic cleaners in any existing pool. Zodiac is offering a $ 150 consumer rebate on the 9400 Sport model and a $ 50 consumer rebate on the 9100 Sport for purchases made in the U.S. April 1 through Sept. 3, 2012.
About Zodiac Pool Systems, Inc.
Zodiac Pool Systems, Inc., a subsidiary of Zodiac Marine & Pool, S.A.S., is a global leader in swimming pool and spa products and services. The company's comprehensive product lines are marketed under the leading brand names of Zodiac®, Polaris®, Jandy® Pro Series, Na ture2®, and Cover-Pools®. Zodiac is the leading provider of premium, innovative pool and spa products and is committed to designing and producing the most energy efficient, earth-friendly pool products and systems available.
Polaris cleaners are the number one recognized brand of pool cleaners in the swimming pool industry and have enjoyed more than 40 years as the top selling pressure pool cleaner. The new robotics from Polaris display the same high quality engineering, rugged construction and reliability that pool owners have come to expect from the brand.
To learn more about Zodiac, visit www.zodiacpoolsystems.com or call 800-822-7933.
Engadget