SKU: 40684097264
blue navy dress uniform

blue navy dress uniform Original U.S. WWI US Navy Gunners Mate Service Dress Blue Uniform Set – International Military Antiques

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blue navy dress uniform Original U.S. WWI US Navy Gunners Mate Service Dress Blue Uniform Set – International Military AntiquesOriginal Items: Only One Set Available. The US Navy dress blues have been in service for over 150 years and are still worn today. On a couple of occasions the Navy tried to replace the uniform. First, in the mid 40s, an "Ike" style uniform featuring a short jacket was tried out and was soundly rejected after its trial period. Then, between 1973 and 1980 the uniform was, in fact, briefly replaced with a more contemporary suit and visor cap design only

 Original Items: Only One Set Available. The US Navy dress blues have been in service for over 150 years and are still worn today. On a couple of occasions the Navy tried to replace the uniform. First, in the mid-40s, an "Ike" style uniform featuring a short jacket was tried out and was soundly rejected after its trial period. Then, between 1973 and 1980 the uniform was, in fact, briefly replaced with a more contemporary suit and visor cap design only to return to the tried-and-true dress blues. The uniform's main qualities of comfort, practicality, and a distinctive design have endeared it to the sailor. Iconic in appearance, the primary WW2 dress blue outfit consisted of a beret style cap with a ribbon and bow around the band; a "V" neck jumper with a square sailor's collar; a silk neckerchief; and bellbottom trousers with a 13-button broadfall front. Although its design features evolved from needs that had long since passed into history and were archaic even by WW2 standards, the uniform provided the sailor with an instantly recognizable uniform that boosted morale, evoked esprit de corps, and honored the Navy's proud history.

Photos dating back to at least the early 1860s show US sailors wearing a blue wool uniform not too different from the WW2 design. Through much of its early years the uniform was worn at sea, but by WW2 it had become mainly a dress uniform used for more formal occasions such as in formations, ceremonial activities, or for special guard duty. It was also worn on shore leave in appropriate climates. In fact, during WW2 it is most often seen being worn in northern shore and training stations by new recruits. The shift from a practical working uniform to one used for dress occasions was inevitable as military doctrine was evolving during the 1930s and 40s by setting specific roles for uniforms and establishing clear distinctions between work, garrison, and combat attire. And by the end of WW2 the age of multi-use uniforms had passed.

The dress blue jumper and trouser combination was considered a winter uniform to be worn in cool temperatures. It was constructed of high quality 16-ounce Melton wool that had a fine nap and was relatively soft to the touch. There were appropriate accessories to keep sailors warm on colder days. These included an overcoat made of matching heavy-weight Melton, blue wool knit gloves, and a blue wool muffler. The Dress Blue Uniform was included as part of the enlisted man's initial clothing gratuity. In northern training stations it was issued at induction and in warmer areas not until graduation was complete and final assignment received.

The dress blue uniform underwent continuous refinement over the decades of its use as was typically the case with uniforms that existed for any length of time. This process continued during WW2 with some significant changes being made to the jumper and trousers at the end of 1943. At this time it was decided to shorten the length of the jumper by six inches and simplify the waistband area of the trousers. These changes were implemented primarily to realize savings in a wartime economy by reducing the amount of fabric required to make the uniform and to speed up production by simplifying the manufacturing process.

The Dress Blue Uniform Items In This Grouping:
- Patched Gunner’s Mate Jumper and Trousers: The Gunner's Mate rating is primarily surface warfare-based. Closely associated Naval occupational ratings are Fire Controlman (FC), Aviation Ordnanceman (AO), Missile Technician (MT), Mineman (MN). The Gunner's Mate rating is one of the original ratings created as a result of the Naval Armament Act of 1794. The others include Boatswain's Mate (BM), Quartermasters (QM), Master-at-Arms (MA), and Yeoman (YN). The rating is also among the top five source ratings for enlisted Naval Special Warfare candidates.

The left breast features a single pinned on ribbon for the WWI Victory Medal, in wonderful condition. The right upper sleeve has a strange combination “dual rated” type of patch. The rate insignia is what appears to be a Gunner’s Mate as well as a Quartermaster, one we have not encountered before! The right shoulder has a white branch mark present. Enlisted men below the rank of petty officer wore stripes around the shoulder of their dress blue jumpers called Branch Marks. These stripes were made of ⅜-inch-wide white or red braid. Men assigned to the Seaman Branch wore a white braid on the right shoulder and men assigned to the Artificer Branch (Engine Room Force) wore a red braid on the left shoulder. Branch Marks were worn until the rank of Petty Officer was achieved, after which a Rating Badge was worn on the sleeve of the jumper. The cuff stripes indicate the rank of a Seaman 1st Class. Both the trousers and jumper are in good condition with minor moth nips and no significant damage.

- Pre-1933 USS Yorktown Flat Cap: The blue cloth cap was remarkable for its longevity having served as an essential part of the enlisted sailor's uniform for over one hundred years. During its considerable time in service, the blue cap sailed on frigates, sloops, paddle wheels, submarines, battleships, and aircraft carriers. It was present for the transition from sails to steam to fuel oil, and even lived to see the advent of nuclear propulsion. But perhaps, most of all, the cap brings back memories of great armadas, the age of Dreadnoughts, and the historic conflicts they partook in. Recorded in the Navy Uniform Regulations as early as 1833, the blue cap was originally part of an ensemble of clothing prescribed for enlisted seamen to be worn outdoors in both cold and warm weather. Early regulations simply described a "Blue Cloth Cap" until the Civil War period when the wording was slightly changed to "Blue Cloth Cap, without visor".

The circumference of the pre-1933 cap was much larger and required a wire stiffener on the inside to help keep its shape. Just like a lot of other sailors, the stiffener was removed to attribute a saltier appearance. The 1933 cap had a front riser that lifted the crown well above the ribbon. Additionally, the crown of the 1933 cap was attached to the sides using a cord seam, which is not present on this one. Prior to 1941, the vessel's name or any one of a number of different shore station designations could be displayed on the ribbon. In this case it's the Gunboat USS Yorktown (PG-1). The cap is in lovely condition and is even named on the inside with H. H. EDMAN stenciled into the top lining. Unfortunately we have not been able to locate any service information, making for a wonderful research opportunity.

This is truly a wonderful set of an early US Navy Dress Blue Uniform with a ship tallied flat cap! Comes more than ready for research and display.

Approx. Measurements:
Collar to shoulder: 9.5”
Shoulder to sleeve: 20”
Shoulder to shoulder: 17.5”
Chest width: 17.5”
Waist width: 18”
Hip width: 18”
Front length: 23.5"

Pants:
Waist:15.5"
Inseam: 28"

USS Yorktown (PG-1)
USS Yorktown was the lead ship of her class of steel-hulled, twin-screw gunboats in the United States Navy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. She was the second U.S. Navy ship named in honor of the American Revolutionary War's Battle of Yorktown.

Yorktown was laid down by William Cramp & Sons of Philadelphia in May 1887 and launched in April 1888. She was just over 244 feet (74 m) long and 36 feet (11 m) abeam, and displaced 1,710 long tons (1,740 t). She was equipped with two steam engines which were supplemented with three schooner-rigged masts. The ship's main battery consisted of six 6-inch (15.2 cm) guns and was augmented by an assortment of smaller-caliber guns.

At launch, Yorktown joined the Squadron of Evolution of "New Navy" steel-hulled ships. Detached from that squadron, Yorktown, under the command of Robley D. Evans, sailed to Valparaíso, Chile, during the 1891 Baltimore Crisis and relieved USS Baltimore at that port. After that situation was resolved, Yorktown took part in the joint British–American sealing patrol in Alaskan waters and duty on the Asiatic Station before returning to the United States in 1898. Yorktown was out of commission during the Spanish–American War, but took part in actions in the Philippine–American War and the Boxer Rebellion in 1899 and 1900, respectively, after she had been recommissioned.

After three years out of commission from 1903 to 1906, Yorktown hosted the Secretary of the Navy on board when he greeted the Great White Fleet on its arrival in San Francisco in May 1908. Over the next five years, most of Yorktown's time was spent in sealing patrols in Alaska and duty in Latin American ports. From July 1912, Yorktown was out of commission for alterations, but resumed duties off the Mexican, Nicaraguan, and Honduran coasts beginning in April 1913. Through World War I, Yorktown continued in the same role, until she departed for the East Coast of the United States in April 1918. She served as an escort for one convoy headed to Halifax in August, and remained in coastal escort duties in the east until January 1919. After arrival at San Diego in February, she was decommissioned for the final time in June 1919, and was assigned the hull number PG-1 the following year. She was sold in 1921 to an Oakland, California firm and broke up that same year.

Recommissioned on 1 April 1913, with Commander George B. Bradshaw in command, Yorktown operated out of San Diego on shakedown into mid-April. She was soon back at Corinto, however, remaining in Nicaragua until 5 June. After a brief period of operations off the coast, she returned to Corinto on 21 June and remained there for over a month before departing on 31 July to coal at Salina Cruz, Mexico. She moved to Mazatlán on 10 August and there picked up mail, delivering it to the port of Topolobampo, Mexico, on the 11th. Yorktown remained there until mid-September.

For the remainder of 1913, Yorktown conducted local operations out of San Diego and San Francisco. In January 1914, though, the gunboat returned to Mexican waters and investigated local conditions at Ensenada between 3 and 6 January before moving, in subsequent months, to a succession of Mexican ports: Mazatlán, San Blas, Miramar, Topolobampo, and La Paz. Following an overhaul at Mare Island from 24 June to 2 September 1914, Yorktown served in Mexican waters again into June 1915. From that point until the entry of the United States into World War I in April 1917, Yorktown continued her routine of patrols off Mexican, Nicaraguan, and Honduran ports with occasional repairs at Mare Island and maneuvers out of San Diego.

After the United States joined the Allies, Yorktown operated off the coast of Mexico until August 1917, when she paused briefly at San Diego. On 18 July 1917, Yorktown rescued the last surviving members of an abandoned guano mining settlement on Clipperton Island. From a peak population of roughly 100 in 1915, only four women and seven children survived. After her time off the Mexican coast, Yorktown then cruised off the west coasts of Central and South America into 1918. After a refit at Mare Island, Yorktown, sailed for the east coast on 28 April 1918, transiting the Panama Canal en route, and arrived at New York on 20 August. The gunboat escorted a coastal convoy to Halifax, soon there after before returning to New York. She performed local coastwise escort duties through the end of World War I. After a period of upkeep at the New York Navy Yard in December, she departed the east coast on 2 January 1919 on her last voyage to California.

Arriving at San Diego on 15 February 1919, Yorktown was placed out of commission at Mare Island on 12 June 1919. On 17 June 1920, she was assigned the hull number PG-1. The veteran steel-hulled gunboat was sold to the Union Hide Company of Oakland, California, on 30 September 1921; she was broken up in Oakland sometime after that.

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4.2 ★★★★★
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Verified Purchase
B.I. Black
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
Great for large amounts of pet hair
Color: Black04
Unboxed it today and got it cleaning the main part of the house after just charging it to 51%. I am still having trouble believing how good it is, especially in cleaning up clumps of pet hair all over the place. We have multiple dogs and cats who shed constantly and copiously, and I have black floors to boot (pro tip: pets and black floors are a bad combination). In addition, the beasts keep tracking in mud/dirt from the backyard and leave muddy (when raining) and dusty (when dry) paw marks all over the place. So I set out to see how the S7 would deal with the worst of it. I decided to not manually vacuum first because I wanted to stress-test it with a week's worth of pet hair clumped all over the place along with a filthy floor. I installed the Roborock app on an Android tablet (with no Google account on it, got the app off apkpure, natch), created a Roborock account, and used the app to connect the robot to my Wifi and install a firmware update which was available. I then filled the water reservoir and snapped on the mop attachment with the mop cloth on it. Then as soon as the charge level hit 51% I pressed the "Clean" button in the app and waited to see how the robot would tackle the very unclean floor. The S7 was totally up to the challenge, and right out of the dock it left a strip of unbelievably clean floor. Now I wish I had taken photographs, because this thing just went gangbusters on all the clumps of hair and dust on the floor and I'm still pleasantly shocked by how good a job it did. The area mapping algorithm is pretty efficient and effective - it divided up non-rectilinear areas into blocks of rectangles, and after systematically cleaning the rectangular area it went to clean the irregularly shaped areas (of which my house has many; I think the architect hated 90-degree angles and liked conic sections). As the robot moves about doing its business, the app shows real-time progress of the robot's movement as well as new areas of the map appearing - if you've played an RPG computer game, the map update as the LIDAR refines the map and shows new areas is very like how games like Baldur's Gate, Diablo, etc uncover new areas of the map as you explore them. It did most of the main area in 34 minutes, using up 32% of charge. Just as it negotiated the tall bumpy threshold into one of the bedrooms, it decided it needed to return to the dock for charging. Now, that threshold between the bedroom and the main area is quite large, and I was expecting that I'd need to go help the robot back into the main area so it could go dock itself, but after a few seconds I heard it trundling back in and it headed straight to the dock and plugged itself in to charge. At this point I plucked it off the dock to see exactly how much trouble it had gotten itself into with all the pet hair it had sucked up so far. I expected that the roller would be wound solid with pet hair and that I'd need a session with scissors and patience. It was not needed - the roller was completely clean, and most of the pet hair it had sucked up was in the dust bin. One compressed clump of pet hair was up against a wall, but I think it got dislodged there as the robot cleaned the floor at the wall junction. The dustbin itself could be designed a bit better because it has a couple of baffles across the top of it (under a removable filter) which make it a little difficult to empty the dustbin of pet hair - I had to pick out clumps with my fingers and pitch them in a dustbin. No biggie, though. I then checked the state of the mop cloth to see whether the cleaned-up pet hair was felted to the cloth, and again I was impressed by how little pet hair was actually on the mop cloth; I expected lots but found almost none, which was further proof that the robot had vacuumed up whatever it encountered. The water reservoir was about half empty. Sound-wise, the robot is not that noisy when cleaning - to me it seems to be less noisy than a regular non-robotic vacuum cleaner. The robot is currently resting (charging) and I've refilled the water reservoir. Can't wait to see how the algorithm handles cleaning when it has to resume cleaning where it left off. One thing I have to mention: since Roborock is a Chinese company I had some privacy concerns regarding house maps etc (remember the Roomba scandal from a few years ago?) which remain to be assuaged, but the company's product page for the S7 MaxV Ultra (the S7's bigger better brother) states that they have privacy certifications from a well-known German arbiter whose name escapes me at the moment, so perhaps this is not going to be a problem after all. All in all, I am VERY impressed by this thing and will definitely be buying the AutoDock for it. Next year, I'll buy its bigger brother the S7 MaxV Ultra (with double the suction power, and a snazzy self-cleaning AutoDock) when I have some money to drop on it.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2022
S
Verified Purchase
SLM
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Impressive upgrade from S5.
Color: Black04
I recently replaced my Roborock S5 with this one when the S5 died. This version genuinely impresses me. It is quieter than the S5, even on Max; has better pickup; has a better designed side brush and dustbin (top mount of filter minimizes the filter dirtying, but makes emptying it a little more awkward); and it has a mopping function that is actually useful. I have to mop a lot less now. The sound it makes also is much less annoying, so I don't mind having it run while I am home anymore. I mop a lot because I have two old Yorkies who are about to pass away, and they're frequently leaving bladder, stomach and or bowel contents on the floor. I also have a cat who thinks it's fun to pee in the cat box and poop next to it. As long as you don't tell it to clean up a pet mess that should be picked up or wiped up instead, it is very useful for helping to clean up pet messes once the pee or puke has been sopped and wiped up, or the poop has been picked up. When I need it to clean up the remnants of messes like that, I use 3% hydrogen peroxide in the water tank instead of water. It cleans, disinfects and doesn't harm the S7. If you have old, sick and/or clueless pets and they make significant messes it might encounter while you are not available then you will either need to lock them up while it runs and check for messes first, or get one that can avoid pet messes. That is the only drawback I see this machine having. The software is excellent. I was able to have it map the house and then easily and quickly correct the "rooms" layout it had concluded were in play. They weren't far off, either. I have it set to vacuum automatically in Balanced mode every week day, and do a deep mopping of the house every weekend day, a few hours after it vacuums the house at max. The level of configurability is top notch. Can't believe how well it mops. Stuff I would have had to pull out the mop for before, it can and does handle for me. Dried up pet puke, dried spills, even dried spills that have managed to collect a lot of dirt because they're sticky from sugar. I only have to pull out the mop once a week now, instead of up to 3x a day. When I'm cleaning the remnants of a pet mess that is oily, such as wiped up urine, I put down some dish soap on that spot on the ground and then let the machine spread it around while it mops to get rid of the oily residue. Until I cleaned up all the power cables on the floor, it had a tendency to get stuck on them while mopping. While it always found a way to get out of being stuck, this caused it to make puddles of dirty mop water that later dried up and left spots that I had to have it go back and mop up. Solution: make sure it can't get caught on power cables! That was my fault, so all I can say here is that I'm impressed that it can get itself un-stuck each time. This makes my life much easier, in multiple ways. I don't have to vacuum anymore. I only mop a fraction as much as I was doing before. And I can breathe better because the vacuum picks up better than before and the mop actually does clean the floor. Every time I have washed the mop pad it has created muddy water in the sink while I'm scrubbing soap into it. So far only one of those times has involved a pet mess that should have been picked up before it ran, so I know the "muddy water" results from fine dust and dirt that is on the floor that can't just be vacuumed up. The mop feature cleans a lot of fine dust off the floor, and that really helps me breathe better. I have what one doctor called "hypersensitive lungs", and dust makes me cough a lot. This isn't cheap, but it's worth the cost if you need to keep your house much cleaner than otherwise with a minimum of work on your part. Yes, you have to clean the mop pad every 1-2x it mops, but this takes about 3 minutes. I pop it in the sink, give it a few drops of dish soap or a few pumps of hand soap, and throw in an inch of hot water. Scrub it against itself until the water is good and muddy, and then drain and repeat the scrub against itself in fresh water without more soap. It will dirty that somewhat as well, and then be clean. Battery life is enough to vacuum my whole house on Max and then deep-mop it at maximum agitation as well, and still be around 56% battery. (My house is a little smaller than average.) The water tank can clean my entire house in one go on a standard vacuum and mop run with max water drip, but deep mopping is best done a room at a time with a tank check after each. I also have a female family member with very long hair who lives in this house. The brush is almost immune to getting wrapped up in her hair. Her hair was absolutely killing the S5's brush roll; I would have to clean it about once a week, and it wasn't always easy. I have had to spend maybe a few seconds once removing her hair with the new roll, and without even checking until a month after buying it. Even then it was only a few strands. Impressive. All in all, very pleased. This is a critical and very necessary appliance in my house, both because it lets me spend more time on my business instead of cleaning, and because it cleans well enough to make it much easier to breathe. This should definitely be at least one of your top two or three options. My research showed that there were only one, maybe two other vacuum systems that were worth considering as of this review. Given how crowded the market is, that's impressive. I'm very happy with my choice, and I will not be looking back.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2021
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Verified Purchase
skookum
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Very good product with great customer support
Color: White
I am giving this 4 stars because of occasional network drops and its ability to get stuck underneath furniture. Given this, their customer support is excellent. Overall a very good product. Read on for gory details... I bought this unit a couple of months ago. For the first two weeks, it worked just fine. Then one day it started up and showed a “New environment detected” message, which forced it to begin a brand‑new map. I already had a complete map with no‑go zones set up, so I wasn’t thrilled to see it forget everything for no clear reason. I tried reloading my saved map, but it still insisted the environment was new. So I removed the device from the app, rebooted it, and added it again. At that point the original map was gone—which I expected—but the problems continued. Next came repeated “LIDAR blocked” errors. I cleaned the sensors thoroughly, but the unit would still stall during mapping and just sit in the middle of my studio. The space is about 850 sq ft and fairly simple, so nothing unusual there. After several attempts (and a few videos documenting the issue), I reached out to Roborock support. They escalated me to Tier II right away. I explained the situation, sent the videos, and they responded quickly. They agreed the unit needed to be replaced. They covered the shipping, I sent the defective unit back, and they shipped me a replacement. The new unit works perfectly. So, credit where it’s due—Roborock’s customer support was excellent. I’m pretty sure the original unit had a faulty LIDAR sensor. One tip for anyone buying this or any Roborock model: Let it complete its first mapping and cleaning run, then immediately go into the map and set up your no‑go zones. These robots have a talent for “going off‑road,” especially under furniture or anywhere with lots of cords. Adding no‑go zones around those trouble spots will save you a lot of frustration. Otherwise, the robot seems almost determined to find the worst possible places to get stuck. Also, take some time to go through the App. There are a lot of bells and whistles. Use what you think works best for your situation.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 8, 2026
J
Verified Purchase
J
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 1
Stay away - terrible company!
Color: Black04, Color: Black04
Updated review - after interacting with the company I am making this a 1 star review from 5 start. After only 10 months, the robot entirely failed. Completely non-working. I contacted the company for warranty replacement and immediately began having issues. The company dragged me first through a week-long, slow back and forth question process asking me questions like "are you sure you plugged it in?". After finally determining the product required replacement, they immediately got weird. First they said I would have to pay to ship the robot back to them (despite it clearly being a manufacturing defect that it had failed so quickly after purchase, especially considering the excellent care/condition I kept the robot in) . Then they said "it may or may not be covered under warranty". It was clear they didn't want to honor the warranty. Then they sent me messages quibbling about how old my machine was, basically saying it might be too old. This is despite the $650 machine only being 10 months old, which is not old at all. We all expect a $650 machine to last longer than 10 months. Finally, they say "they will check it out" but were still very evasive about the warranty and clearly not wanting to honor it. So I sent them my machine, which was clean, with fresh parts, and in great condition other than not turning on. Today, I got a shipment back from them. See attached picture. They sent me back somebody else's used machine as a replacement. The machine came in a sloppily packaged box that showed no care in packaging. The machine itself is covered in somebody else's dirt, completely filthy, covered in dents/scratches, and the parts are worn out and needing replacement. I have contacted the company and asked them to immediately resolve this disgrace. Providing me a machine in this poor of condition is likely a violation of warranty law, since they have provided me back something worse than I sent them. Shame on roborock. I will never purchase from this company again. This shows no professionalism or customer care of the company. Do not buy this company. Their customer service is awful and they will not honor the warranty. Previous review (before this vacuum broke after only 10 months and I had to interact with the company): I've had this machine for 6 months now with zero issues. I run it 1-2/x per day so at this point, it's had hundreds of run cycles. I'll tell you upfront - I have all hardwood floors with some small kitchen and bathroom rugs. So I don't know how this works on carpet. I also have no stairs, so I don't know about stairs. I have 2 dogs who shed and track dirt everywhere. I've owned robot vacuums for about 15 years now, ever since they started coming out. Over the years I've owned roombas, eufy, neato, and roborock. This is my favorite robot vacuum yet and I've been very pleased with it. As with all robot vacuums, you have to pick your floor up or it will get stuck on things. I purchased this on a Black Friday sale and got a great price - I recommend waiting for a good sale. Pros: -Has great, systematic navigation that makes cleaning time very fast. I have about 800 sq ft and it can vacuum in 30 minutes and mop in deep mode in 45 minutes. Also much better than previous robots I've owned. -Good obstacle detection for furniture, it is very good at not running into things. Much better than my previous robots. -Mop is a very nice feature. I like it a lot and my floors feel much cleaner with it. I use the Roborock mopping solution. I find it gives a better clean. You need very little per tank, so a bottle lasts forever. The mop is like a swiffer, so don't expect deep cleaning. I use the mop function every day so the dirt never builds up, and it works just fine. Mop deposits very little water, so dry time is fast. Huge plus since I have dogs, I don't have to worry about them running through water and making a mess. I can run this with my dogs present without issue. I would buy the extra mop pads online so you can always have clean ones. I swap the mop pad for a clean one every day. -Vacuum works pretty well. Picks up most things on my hardwood floors, but I can still feel a small amount left behind. If you turn the mop on with the vacuum, everything feels picked up to me (very clean floors!). -Better at not getting stuck on kitchen/bath rugs than my other robots, but can happen occasionally. Maybe 1 out of every 10 cleans I find it gets stuck on them. -Great battery life. One vacuum runs takes about 25% of the battery for my 800 sq. ft.. This is really nice, because I can run it multiple times per day (every time I leave the house) to always have clean floors. -App works just fine. I like it having it though because I can set it to vacuum before I leave and then turn the "deep mop mode" on while I'm running errands, so it's nicely mopped when I return. Cons: -I wish the height were less (lower profile). It is too tall to get under my dresser and coffee table, which my other robots were able to do with no problem. -Cannot detect cords or other very low profile obstacles. All robots have this problem. Pick up your floors before running. -App is very slow to load. -Vacuum leaves small, but negligible amount behind. I find this comparable to other robots, so for me it's not a big issue - just what I expect from a robot. Mop takes care of what is left, so it's no problem. -The washable filters aren't so great as in they're not really washable. They take days to dry once you wash them, so unless you are cycling between another dry filter, that's a big inconvenience. I've also had several filters mold after washing them, making them unusable again. For me, I've stopped washing them for these reasons and just treat them as disposable. -When you run the vacuum with the mop, a little water does get in the vacuum brush area. This causes some dirt to accumulate (muddy-esque) on some of the parts. I wipe it down when I replace the mop head to prevent accumulation, so it is something you have to take care of. Unknown: -I can't comment on customer service, because I've never had to use them. I guess that's good because nothing has broken! -I don't have stairs so I can't comment on that. In my experience, most robots need a block set up to prevent cliff drops even if they advertise at being able to avoid stairs, so I would assume this is the same. -I don't have thick carpeting. Most robot vacuums don't have enough suction for thick carpeting so a regular vacuum is needed, while using this for "surface" cleaning.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2022
H
Verified Purchase
HAPPYDADDY
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Absolute the BEST-BUY vacuum!
Color: Black
I have roborock E4, it has been running strong for about 4 years. It clean every spot. Bought Q5, thought it could be better but not. Now, I have this Q7, this is a solid upgrade. The app Q7 has many new features that I would like to add in E4, such as x2 round clean etc. It seems the Q7 starts each time to run a quick scan floor map, anyway, it cleans every spot on my house including the carpet and hardwood floor as E4 or better. Not try the mop yet bc mix flooring. The little device also perfect to clean under beds area. Everyday, I see my floor is clean without extra my effort after hard-work home. Amazing! Worth every penny spend on this brand! Highly recommended.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2026

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