Roborock QR 598 Series Review - techubzzireland

Roborock might be a new brand for me, but robot vacuums certainly are not, and the QR series slotted into my home setup with very little fuss. It aims to be a one‑stop floor‑care solution, handling both vacuuming and mopping with a modern app‑first approach and some genuinely useful extras rather than just headline specs.

Design and key features

The QR series is a robot floor cleaner designed for both vacuuming and mopping, with an app that builds a detailed map of your home using precision LiDAR navigation and vision‑based motion control. It uses separate clean and dirty water tanks in the dock, and the model I tested is available in both black and white, so it should blend into most homes without shouting for attention.

Key features include:

  • Multifunctional dock for charging, water management and maintenance.
  • 10,000Pa suction rating, which is at the higher end of what I have tested.
  • Anti‑tangle side brush that helps reduce hair wraps.
  • Reactive obstacle avoidance to steer around common household clutter.
  • Dual liftable spinning mops, so it can mop hard floors and lift on carpets.
  • App control with flexible scheduling and zone cleaning.
  • Voice prompts to keep you updated on status and issues.

Build quality feels solid, with the dock and robot both giving the impression they will handle daily use rather than just occasional runs. The twin‑tank setup also means you are not constantly babysitting it with refills for every short clean.

Setup and app experience

Setup is very straightforward, and Roborock has actually made it easier than many older robots I have used. There is a QR code on the box for the app and another on the unit itself to pair to your phone, so you are not hunting for menus or digging through Wi‑Fi settings. The Roborock app is highly rated, sitting at 4.8 out of 5 from over 324k reviews and more than 5 million downloads, and my own experience lines up with that: installation was seamless, it connected to my home Wi‑Fi without drama, and I was able to control the robot both at home and when out without freezes or glitches that some rival products still suffer from.

Once the app was installed, the initial mapping run was impressively fast. On older or lower‑end models I have used, you often have to wait for the robot to physically drive every inch of a room before the map appears. Here, the laser‑based system scans and builds the layout quickly without needing to cover every corner first, and it also picked up carpets on the map, which is handy when you want to fine‑tune where it mops versus vacuums. After the quick map, I could choose to vacuum and mop together or run each mode separately, and there is the usual option to schedule cleans for later.

Noise levels are worth mentioning. During normal vacuum and mop runs the QR series is relatively quiet compared to several models I have tried, which makes it more realistic to run while you are working from home or watching TV in the next room. The flip side is that the dock’s prep and rinse cycles are noticeably loud, and during these stages the otherwise clear voice prompts can be a bit muffled by the background noise.

Real‑world performance

In daily use the QR series behaved like a mature product rather than a first‑generation attempt. Navigation was confident, with the robot moving quickly from room to room and avoiding most obstacles rather than ploughing into chair legs repeatedly. Vacuum and mopping performance were both good, and the option to clean filters when required helps keep suction consistent over time.

One area where it stood out was step handling. The manual states it can climb up to a 2 cm threshold between rooms. In my house the main test is a 2.5 cm step leading onto a timber floor, and most robots I have tested over the years either bounce off this or get stuck halfway. The QR series did hesitate and “think” about it, but in every run it managed to get over the 2.5 cm step, which means it is outperforming its own specification in a useful way.

Day‑to‑day maintenance is straightforward. Swapping or cleaning the water tanks is quick, and you are not wrestling with awkward clips or hidden latches. Filters and brushes are accessible, so routine cleaning does not feel like a chore – which is important if you actually want to keep using the robot long term.

One small but important note for buyers in Ireland and the UK: my review unit came with a two‑pin plug rather than the expected three‑pin UK/Ireland plug, so I had to use an adapter. It is not a deal‑breaker, but it is something you should be aware of when you unbox it.

Company background

Roborock is a Chinese smart‑home cleaning brand founded in Beijing in 2014, originally incubated within Xiaomi’s ecosystem where it first built the Xiaomi‑branded Mi Robot Vacuum before pushing its own name worldwide. The company started out focusing on robot vacuums with advanced mapping and navigation, and its S5 series helped establish Roborock as a serious premium alternative to more established names; over the late 2010s and early 2020s it expanded into the S, Q and other lines, adding mopping, auto‑empty docks and more sophisticated obstacle avoidance as it moved into the mainstream.

Warranty

The QR series comes with a 2‑year warranty when bought through official UK/IE channels, which is reassuring for a product that is likely to see daily use.​

Final thoughts

Overall the Roborock QR series feels like a well‑sorted robot cleaner rather than an experimental gadget, and it shows that the brand has learned a lot from earlier generations. The app is stable and easy to use, mapping is fast and accurate, and general cleaning performance is strong, with particularly good handling of room‑to‑room transitions and that 2.5 cm step in my home. It is not perfect – the dock can be very loud during rinsing and the plug situation on my unit was less than ideal – but if you want a capable vacuum‑and‑mop robot that behaves like it was designed for real homes, the QR series is an easy one to live with.

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By brendanlahert

20 years’ experience in the commercial technical industry. Interested in technology. Certified ITIL v3 Service Management, Project Management Prince 2, Six Sigma.

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