Why it matters
What it tends to unlock
Perception, mapping, detection, and safer motion decisions, cleaner autonomy loops when the robot needs environmental context, and higher-quality data for navigation, manipulation, or monitoring.
Ultrasonic Radar appears across 1 tracked robots, concentrated in Lawn & Garden. Use this page to understand why the signal matters, who relies on it most, and which live profiles deserve the first comparison click.
Tracked robots
1
Ready now
1
Manufacturers
1
Public prices
1
Why it matters
Perception, mapping, detection, and safer motion decisions, cleaner autonomy loops when the robot needs environmental context, and higher-quality data for navigation, manipulation, or monitoring.
What to verify
Coverage, placement, and how the sensor performs in messy conditions, what decisions actually rely on the sensor versus backup systems, and whether the label signals depth, proximity, or full-scene understanding.
Coverage
The heaviest concentration is in Lawn & Garden (1). Top manufacturers include Mammotion (1).
Research brief
The useful questions here are how common Ultrasonic Radar really is, which robot classes depend on it, and which live profiles are worth opening before you compare the whole stack.
Verified 30d
1
1 in the last 90 days
Top category
Lawn & Garden
1 tracked robots
Paired most often with
3d Binocular Vision, 4g Cellular, and Amazon Alexa
Decision brief
Where it helps most
What to validate
Evidence basis
Source pack
Use the structure first: which categories lean on Ultrasonic Radar, which manufacturers repeat it, and what usually ships beside it.
Lead category
1 tracked robots currently anchor this label.
Most repeated manufacturer
1 tracked robots make this the clearest manufacturer-level signal on the route.
Most common adjacent signal
1 shared robots pair this component with 3d Binocular Vision.
| # | Name | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lawn & Garden | 1 robot |
| # | Name | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mammotion | 1 robot |
| # | Name | Shared robots |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3d Binocular Vision | 1 robot |
| 2 | 4g Cellular | 1 robot |
| 3 | Amazon Alexa | 1 robot |
| 4 | Bluetooth | 1 robot |
| 5 | Google Home | 1 robot |
| 6 | Lift Sensor | 1 robot |
How to read the market
Category concentration tells you where the component is actually doing work, manufacturer repetition shows whether the signal is market-wide or vendor-specific, and pairings reveal which neighboring technologies usually ship alongside it.
The old card wall is replaced with a featured first-click strip and a dense inventory table so the route behaves like a serious directory.
Directory briefing
Open the clearest profiles first, then sweep the full inventory in a denser table. Featured cards are selected by readiness, image quality, and official source availability, so the first click is usually the most informative one.
Ready now
1
Public price
1
Official links
1
Featured now
1
How to scan this directory
Best first clicks
These robots score highest on readiness, public detail quality, and image clarity, making them the fastest way to understand how Ultrasonic Radar shows up in practice.
The Mammotion LUBA 2 AWD 5000 is a wire-free robotic lawn mower for large yards up to 5,000 m² (about 1.25 acres). It uses RTK satellite positioning combined with an AI vision system (UltraSense) to map and navigate without buried boundary wires — just drive it around your yard once to set the perimeter. All-wheel drive with omnidirectional wheels lets it climb slopes up to 80% (38°) and handle rough terrain. The dual 400mm cutting discs with 12 blades mow up to 1,200 m² per charge at a whisper-quiet sub-60 dB. It manages up to 30 mowing zones with individual schedules and cutting heights, returns to charge automatically, and resumes where it left off. Triple-redundant obstacle avoidance (3D vision, ultrasonic radar, bumper) keeps pets and kids safe. Controlled via the Mammotion app with 4G, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth connectivity. Although Mammotion launched newer LUBA 3 AWD models in 2026, the LUBA 2 AWD is still listed on official Mammotion pages rather than clearly discontinued.
Public price
$2,899
$2,899 USD was the original 5000-model…
Battery
190 min per charge
Charge 120 min
Shortlist read
Shipping now with public pricing visible.
Compact mobile scan: status, price, standout context, and links stay visible without sideways scrolling.
Mammotion · Lawn & Garden
Price
$2,899
Standout
Battery · 190 min per charge
Sorted by readiness first so live, scannable profiles do not get buried under the long tail.
| Robot | Status | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
LUBA 2 AWD 5000 Mammotion · Lawn & Garden |
Available | $2,899 | Official |
Quick answers
The short version of what this label means in the ui44 catalog, where it matters, and how to compare it without over-reading the marketing copy.
Ultrasonic Radar currently appears on 1 tracked robots across 1 manufacturers. That makes this route useful for both deep research and fast shortlist scanning, not just one-off editorial reading.
The strongest concentration is in Lawn & Garden (1). Category mix is the fastest clue for whether this component behaves like baseline plumbing or a more selective differentiator.
1 of the 1 tracked profiles are currently marked Available or Active. That means the label has live market relevance here, but you should still open the profiles with public pricing or official links first before treating it as a clean buyer signal.
Start with readiness, official source quality, and the standout spec column in the inventory table. On component routes, those three signals usually remove weak profiles faster than reading every descriptive paragraph.
The strongest shared-stack signals here are 3d Binocular Vision (1), 4g Cellular (1), and Amazon Alexa (1). Use those pairings to branch into adjacent component pages when one label is too narrow for the decision.
1 matching robots currently expose public pricing. That is enough to create directional context, but not enough to treat one price bracket as the whole market. Use the directory to find the transparent profiles first, then widen the sweep.
Start with Mammotion (1). Repetition across manufacturers is often the clearest signal that the component is part of a stable market pattern rather than a one-off marketing callout.
The original long-form component research is still here, but collapsed so the main route can prioritize hierarchy and scan speed.
The baseline explanation of what Ultrasonic Radar is, why it matters, and how to think about it before comparing implementations.
Ultrasonic Radar is a sensor component found in 1 robot tracked in the ui44 Home Robot Database. As a sensor technology, Ultrasonic Radar plays a specific role in enabling robot perception, interaction, or operation depending on its implementation in each platform.
Component Type
Used By
1 robot
Manufacturer
Category
Price Range
$2.9k
Available Now
1 robot
Sensors are the perceptual backbone of any robot. They convert physical phenomena — light, sound, distance, motion, temperature — into digital signals that the robot's AI can process and act upon.
In the ui44 database, Ultrasonic Radar is categorized under Sensor components. For a comprehensive explanation of all component types, consult the components glossary.
The sensor suite is one of the most important differentiators between robots. Robots with richer sensor arrays can navigate more complex environments, avoid obstacles more reliably, and perform more nuanced tasks.
Directly impacts what a robot can actually do in practice — not just on paper
Richer sensor arrays enable more complex navigation and interaction
Determines obstacle avoidance reliability and object/person recognition
Used in 1 robot across 1 category — Lawn & Garden, indicating specialized use across the robotics industry.
Modern robot sensors work by emitting or detecting various forms of energy. The robot's processor fuses data from multiple sensors simultaneously (sensor fusion) to build a coherent understanding of its surroundings.
Active sensors
LiDAR and ultrasonic emit signals and measure reflections to determine distance and shape
Passive sensors
Cameras and microphones detect ambient light and sound without emitting anything
Sensor fusion
The processor combines data from all sensors simultaneously for a coherent environmental picture
Ultrasonic Radar Integration
Implementation varies by robot platform and manufacturer. Each robot integrates Ultrasonic Radar differently depending on system architecture, use case, and target tasks. Integration with other onboard sensors and the main processing unit determines real-world performance.
Deeper technical framing, matched technology profiles, and the longer use-case treatment for Ultrasonic Radar.
In-depth technical analysis of 2 technology domains relevant to this component
While the sections above cover general sensor principles, this analysis focuses on the particular technology domains relevant to Ultrasonic Radar based on its implementation characteristics. We cover Ultrasonic Sensing Principles, Radar & Millimeter-Wave Sensing.
Ultrasonic sensors detect objects by emitting high-frequency sound pulses (typically 40 kHz, well above the 20 kHz upper limit of human hearing) and measuring the time until the echo returns. This time-of-flight measurement, combined with the known speed of sound, yields the distance to the reflecting surface. Ultrasonic sensing is one of the oldest and most reliable ranging technologies in robotics, valued for its simplicity, low cost, and ability to detect surfaces that challenge optical sensors — including transparent glass, dark-colored objects, and thin obstacles like chair legs.
In home robots, ultrasonic sensors typically serve specific roles rather than as the primary navigation system. They excel as cliff sensors on the underside of the robot, detecting floor edges and stair drops to prevent falls. Side-mounted ultrasonic sensors can track wall distance for edge-following cleaning patterns. Front-mounted arrays provide close-range obstacle detection as a complement to camera or LiDAR-based systems. The effective range of consumer-grade ultrasonic sensors is typically 2 cm to 4 meters, with the short minimum range making them particularly useful for detecting obstacles that are too close for LiDAR or camera-based depth sensors to resolve.
The physics of ultrasonic sensing create specific characteristics that designers must account for. The sound cone from an ultrasonic transducer has a beam width of roughly 15-30°, meaning the sensor cannot precisely locate where within its cone an object exists — only how far away it is. This makes ultrasonic sensors less suitable for detailed mapping but effective for binary presence detection. Soft, sound-absorbing materials like heavy curtains or thick carpet may produce weak echoes, reducing detection reliability. Temperature and humidity affect the speed of sound and therefore measurement accuracy, though this is rarely significant in indoor environments. Despite these limitations, ultrasonic sensors remain a standard component in robot sensor suites due to their reliability, low cost, and complementary detection characteristics.
Radar sensors in robotics use radio waves, typically in the millimeter-wave band (24-77 GHz), to detect objects and measure their distance, speed, and direction. Unlike optical sensors that require light or infrared, radar operates reliably in complete darkness, through fog, dust, and light rain, and is unaffected by surface color or reflectivity. These characteristics make radar particularly valuable as a complementary sensor that fills the gaps left by camera and LiDAR systems in challenging conditions.
Millimeter-wave radar designed for robotics applications is compact — modern chip-scale radar modules measure just a few centimeters across — and energy-efficient enough for battery-powered platforms. These sensors emit modulated radio signals and analyze the reflected returns to determine the range (distance), angle (direction), and Doppler shift (relative velocity) of detected objects. The ability to measure velocity directly is unique among common robot sensor types and enables motion-based scene understanding: the radar can distinguish a stationary chair from a walking person based on their Doppler signatures, even when both are at the same range.
In home robotics, radar is emerging as a presence detection sensor that works through non-metallic materials. A robot with radar can detect people through thin walls, furniture, or curtains, enabling more reliable room occupancy detection. Some implementations use radar for vital sign monitoring — detecting breathing and heartbeat patterns through micro-movements of the chest — adding health monitoring capability without physical contact or cameras. The technology is also being applied to gesture recognition, where the radar tracks hand and body movements to enable touchless robot control. As radar sensor chips become cheaper and more integrated, their adoption in consumer robots is expected to accelerate significantly.
In the ui44 database, Ultrasonic Radar is currently tracked exclusively in the LUBA 2 AWD 5000 by Mammotion. This lawn & garden robot integrates Ultrasonic Radar as part of a total technology stack comprising 14 components: 8 sensors, 3 connectivity modules, 2 voice interfaces, and a UltraSense AI Vision with 5 TOPS chip; recognizes 200+ obstacle types; autonomous path optimization AI platform.
The Mammotion LUBA 2 AWD 5000 is a wire-free robotic lawn mower for large yards up to 5,000 m² (about 1.25 acres). It uses RTK satellite positioning combined with an AI vision system (UltraSense) to map and navigate without buried boundary wires — just drive it around your yard once to set the perimeter. All-wheel drive with omnidirectional wheels lets it climb slopes up to 80% (38°) and handle ro…
The LUBA 2 AWD 5000 is priced at $2,899, which includes Ultrasonic Radar as part of the integrated sensor package. Visit the full LUBA 2 AWD 5000 specification page for complete technical details and purchasing information.
Ultrasonic Radar works alongside 7 other sensor components in the LUBA 2 AWD 5000: UltraSense AI Vision (5 TOPS AI chip), RTK-GNSS Satellite Positioning, 3D Binocular Vision, Physical Bumper, Rain Sensor, Lift Sensor, Tilt Sensor. This combination of sensor technologies creates the LUBA 2 AWD 5000's overall sensor capabilities, with each component contributing different aspects of environmental perception.
Beyond the high-level overview, understanding the technical foundations of sensor technologies like Ultrasonic Radar helps buyers and researchers evaluate implementations more critically.
Every sensor converts a physical quantity into an electrical signal that can be digitized and processed. The raw analog output is conditioned through amplification, filtering, and A/D conversion before reaching the processor.
Sensor performance involves key metrics with inherent engineering trade-offs.
Sensor technology in robotics has evolved dramatically over the past decade.
Early home robots relied on simple bump sensors and infrared proximity detectors
Today's platforms incorporate multi-spectral cameras, solid-state LiDAR, and millimeter-wave radar
Miniaturization: sensors that filled circuit boards now fit into fingernail-sized packages
Next frontier: sensor fusion at the hardware level — multiple sensing modalities in single chip-scale packages
No sensor is perfect in all conditions. Understanding limitations is critical for evaluating robots in specific environments.
Key application domains for sensor technologies like Ultrasonic Radar.
Sensors enable robots to build maps of their environment, detect obstacles in real time, and plan collision-free paths. This is essential for both indoor robots (navigating furniture and doorways) and outdoor robots (handling terrain variations and weather conditions). The quality and coverage of the sensor array directly determines how reliably a robot can navigate without human intervention.
Advanced sensors allow robots to identify objects by shape, color, and texture, enabling tasks like picking up items, sorting packages, or recognizing faces. Depth-sensing technologies are particularly important for calculating object distances and sizes, which is necessary for precise manipulation in both home and industrial settings.
In environments shared with humans, sensors provide the critical safety layer that prevents robots from causing harm. Proximity sensors, bumper sensors, and vision systems work together to detect people and obstacles, triggering immediate stop or avoidance maneuvers. This is a fundamental requirement for any robot operating in homes, hospitals, or public spaces.
Sensors can measure temperature, humidity, air quality, and other environmental parameters. Robots equipped with these sensors can perform automated monitoring rounds in warehouses, data centers, or homes, alerting users to abnormal conditions like water leaks, temperature spikes, or poor air quality.
Microphones, cameras, and touch sensors enable natural interaction between robots and humans. These sensors allow robots to recognize voice commands, detect gestures, respond to touch, and maintain appropriate social distances during conversations or collaborative tasks.
Visit each robot's detail page to see which capabilities are available on specific models.
Manufacturer mix, specs context, price context, category overlap, and adjacent components worth branching into next.
Ultrasonic Radar spans 1 robot category — from consumer to research platforms.
Technologies most often paired with Ultrasonic Radar across 1 robot.
Browse the full components directory or see the components glossary for detailed explanations of each technology.
1 of 1 robots with Ultrasonic Radar have public pricing, ranging $2.9k – $2.9k.
Lowest
$2.9k
LUBA 2 AWD 5000
Average
$2.9k
1 robot with pricing
Highest
$2.9k
LUBA 2 AWD 5000
561 other sensor technologies tracked in ui44, ranked by adoption.
32 robots
18 robots
17 robots
15 robots
13 robots
10 robots
8 robots
8 robots
Browse all Sensor components or use the robot comparison tool to evaluate how different sensor configurations perform across specific robot models.
The robotics sensor market is one of the fastest-growing segments in the broader sensor industry. As robots move from controlled industrial environments into unstructured home and commercial spaces, the demands on sensor technology increase dramatically.
Multi-modal sensing
Robots combine multiple sensor types (vision, depth, tactile, inertial) to build comprehensive environmental understanding
Miniaturization
Sensors that once occupied entire circuit boards now fit into fingernail-sized packages, making advanced sensing affordable for consumer robots
Edge AI integration
AI processing directly in sensor modules enables faster perception without cloud latency
Industry Adoption Snapshot
Ultrasonic Radar is adopted by 1 robot from 1 manufacturer in the ui44 database, providing a data-driven view of real-world deployment patterns.
Certifications carried by robots incorporating Ultrasonic Radar, indicating compliance with safety, EMC, and quality standards.
Platform compatibility, voice integration, and AI capabilities across robots with Ultrasonic Radar.
The long-form buyer, maintenance, and troubleshooting material kept available without forcing it into the main scan path.
If Ultrasonic Radar is an important factor in your robot selection, here are key considerations to guide your decision.
Coverage area
Does the sensor array provide 360° awareness or only forward-facing detection?
Range
How far can the robot sense obstacles or objects?
Resolution
How detailed is the sensor data for recognition tasks?
Redundancy
Are there backup sensors if one fails?
Serviceability
Are sensors user-serviceable or require manufacturer maintenance?
A component is only as good as its integration. Check how the manufacturer has incorporated Ultrasonic Radar into the overall robot design and software stack.
Review what other sensor technologies are paired with Ultrasonic Radar in each robot — see the related components section.
Make sure the robot's category matches your use case. Ultrasonic Radar serves different roles in different robot types.
Consider the manufacturer's reputation for software updates, support, and component reliability.
Compare Before You Buy
Use the ui44 comparison tool to evaluate robots with Ultrasonic Radar side by side.
Sensors are among the most maintenance-sensitive components in a robot. Their performance can degrade over time due to physical wear, environmental exposure, and calibration drift. Understanding the maintenance profile of a robot's sensor suite helps set realistic expectations for long-term ownership and operation.
Sensor durability varies significantly by type. Solid-state sensors like IMUs and accelerometers have no moving parts and typically last the lifetime of the robot.
Regular sensor maintenance primarily involves keeping optical surfaces clean. Camera lenses, LiDAR windows, and infrared emitters should be wiped with a soft, lint-free cloth to remove dust and fingerprints.
When evaluating sensor technology for long-term value, consider the manufacturer's track record for software updates that improve sensor utilization. A robot with good sensors and ongoing software development can actually improve its performance over time as algorithms are refined.
For the 1 robot in the ui44 database using Ultrasonic Radar, we recommend checking the individual robot pages for manufacturer-specific maintenance guidance and support documentation. Each manufacturer has different support policies, update frequencies, and warranty terms that affect the long-term ownership experience of their sensor technologies.
Sensor-related issues are among the most common problems home robot owners encounter. Many sensor issues can be resolved with simple maintenance or environmental adjustments, while others may indicate hardware problems requiring manufacturer support. Understanding common failure modes helps you diagnose and resolve issues quickly, minimizing robot downtime.
Likely Causes
Resolution
Likely Causes
Resolution
Likely Causes
Resolution
For model-specific troubleshooting, visit the individual robot pages for the 1 robot using Ultrasonic Radar. Each manufacturer provides model-specific support resources and diagnostic tools for their sensor implementations.
What to do next
This page should hand you off to the next useful comparison step, not strand you at the bottom of a long detail route.
Widen the layer
Open the full sensor workbench when Ultrasonic Radar is only one part of the decision and you need the broader market map.
Side-by-side check
Move from label-level research into direct robot comparison once you know which profiles are documented well enough to trust.
Adjacent signal
This is the most common neighboring component on robots that already use Ultrasonic Radar, so it is the fastest next branch if you need stack context.