Litheli has introduced a new hands-free way to keep your yard looking tidy with the Skope 800 AI-Vision robotic lawn mower. Built around artificial intelligence and smart vision cameras, the Skope 800 is designed to mow efficiently, avoid obstacles, and stay inside your lawn’s edges without the usual setup headaches many robot mowers require.
A major highlight is Litheli’s NEO-FSD intelligent navigation system. Instead of blindly crisscrossing the yard, the mower maps the lawn and plans its route to reduce repeated passes. The system is trained to recognize different terrains and typical lawn layouts, helping the mower understand where the grass area begins and ends. That means homeowners can skip installing perimeter boundary wires, which are often one of the most time-consuming parts of setting up a robotic mower.
For lot size, the Skope 800 is positioned for smaller-to-mid residential lawns. Litheli says it can handle about 1/5 to 1/4 acre, roughly 800 to 1,000 square meters, powered by a 5.0 Ah Infinity Power Share (IPS) lithium-ion battery. The battery is also compatible with Litheli’s other outdoor power tools, which could be a bonus for people already using the brand and looking to share batteries across devices.
Safety and avoidance tech are also central to the Skope 800’s pitch. Using onboard cameras and AI visual obstacle avoidance, it can recognize more than 200 obstacles, including people and pets, and adjust to help prevent collisions. This is especially important for anyone with active kids, animals, or backyard furniture and toys that move around day to day.
Noise is another consideration for robotic lawn mower buyers, and Litheli claims the Skope 800 operates at under 60 dB(A). It’s also built to handle uneven yards, with the company stating it can climb slopes up to 22 degrees (42%) while mowing.
Weather and durability features round out the package. The mower is rated IPX6 for water resistance and includes rain sensing, allowing it to schedule mowing around wet conditions. If mowing is interrupted, it can resume from the last point it stopped, which helps ensure the lawn still gets finished without restarting the whole job. There’s also an anti-theft system intended to reduce the risk of loss when the mower is operating unattended.
Litheli hasn’t yet shared official pricing or a release timeline for the Skope 800 AI-Vision robotic lawn mower, but its feature set puts it squarely in the growing category of smart, camera-guided robot mowers aimed at reducing setup time and improving everyday reliability.






