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Before I get into it, quick transparency note: I received the MOVA V50 Ultra Complete through MOVA’s “Get & Create” program at no cost in exchange for sharing my honest experience. That said, everything here is based on my actual experience using it in my apartment. I’m not an influencer, and I’m definitely not trying to make perfectly staged cleaning content. I’m just excited to see how the V50 works in my home with a normal mess.
TL;DR: I tested the MOVA V50 Ultra Complete on my LVP flooring with a mix of everyday debris, including coffee grounds, eggshell pieces, dryer lint, cardboard, and about 10 days of floor buildup. For a quick vacuum run, it did a lot better than I expected. It picked up the visible mess very well, especially the larger debris, but it still had some trouble reaching all the way under the cabinet toe kicks.
For this test, I wanted the floor to be worse than normal. I usually keep my floors pretty clean, but I intentionally let things build up to see how the V50 handled a more extreme first vacuuming run. I had some dryer lint, small pieces of cardboard, general dust and debris, plus the kind of mess I make most mornings when I grind coffee and crack hard-boiled eggs. I scattered some of that along the kitchen floor and especially near the cabinet toe kicks because that is one area where robot vacuums can struggle.
The V50 did a surprisingly solid job overall. After the run, most of the visible debris was gone. The bigger pieces were picked up, the baseboards looked pretty good, and the corners were better than I expected. The main weak spot was under the cabinet toe kicks. It did not fully clear everything from that recessed area, but to be fair, I had the robot on a quicker, lower setting instead of a more thorough vacuum mode. I also swept afterward to see what was actually left behind, and the pile was much smaller than I expected. Most of what I collected came from places the robot either could not physically reach or did not fully reach, like under the cabinet kickboards, under the refrigerator edge, and areas under my dining table ( The V50 won't fit under it ).
The part that surprised me most was the Swiffer test. For me, the Swiffer is basically my final “truth test” after everything else is done. After I vacuum under the cabinets, sweep the floor, and clean up anything the robot could not physically reach, I run a Swiffer over the area as the last pass. I do that because Swiffers are surprisingly good at showing what fine dust and debris are still left behind after the floor already looks clean ( and it's shockingly a lot ). Usually, even when I manually sweep and vacuum, the Swiffer still picks up a lot. This time, after the V50 had run and I did my normal final check, there really was not much on the pad at all. That was honestly one of the most impressive parts of the test for me because it suggested the V50 was not just grabbing the obvious pieces, but also doing a VERY good job with the finer debris on the LVP.....much better than me manually sweeping and vacuuming. To give you an idea, after manually doing it, the Swiffer is visibly dirty, has hairs stuck to it, etc. As you can see in the picture, after the V50 did its thing, the Swiffer was almost new-looking
Overall, I came away very impressed with the V50’s vacuuming performance on hard floors. It was not perfect around the toe kicks, but the main floor area looked very good, the visible debris was mostly gone, and the Swiffer test was WAY better than I expected. I still want to test it more thoroughly with different suction settings and compare it more directly to the Z60 later, but for this first real vacuum test, the V50 did a very respectable job.
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