Monday, February 14, 2011

How I ended up with a $300 Poop Spinning Death Star for Cats



So, this scrawny cat decided to adopt us. At first we thought it was the black and white cat that the neighbor lady had recently canvassed the neighborhood looking for. Well, it turns out it wasn't her cat... so it became our cat. (Or I should say MY cat)

There begins the dilemma. I adopted the cat, so I needed to take care of the cat.

Poop.

So a lot of my life revolves around poop. We even own a device that creates large sausages full of dirty diapers. Diaper Dekor Plus Diaper Disposal System

Read my review about that one here http://diaperdekorreview.blogspot.com/

But anyways, so I had to deal with this cats poop. After reading a lot of reviews of various cat poop handling devices, I decided to go with the Litter Robot. (Especially after reading the review for the CatGenie I will post at the bottom here.)

So yes, the litter robot is expensive, but yes the litter robot does work. It automates the scooping, saves on litter, contains smell, and its very easy to change the trash bag.

The most annoying thing about it.... my stupid cat holds it all day running around with her little friends, to come home to poop in the robot....

To buy a Poop Spinning Death Star click Litter Robot LRII Automatic Self-Cleaning Litter Box, Beige

To see a Star wars reminiscent animation of said Poop slinging robot click here



So the CatGenie review from here

http://www.amazon.com/gp/cdp/member-reviews/A1RQ1RZQCG80X9/ref=cm_pdp_rev_more?ie=UTF8&sort_by=MostRecentReview#R32RN0APNFZAUM

Cat Genie takes the small unpleasantness of daily cleaning the litter and it saves it up and releases that unpleasantness as one big unscheduled, unpleasant inconvenience every week or two. Advanced monitors will ensure that the device failure will occur during the workday, as you prepare for your important meeting with your prospective client. Nothing like cleaning out wet cat poo in your nicest suit. Or, you may be pleasantly awoken in the middle of the night by the repeating three beeps of "there's poo and hair in the hopper." You will become more familiar with your cat's feces every day as the cat genie gently fills your home with the aroma of baking excrement. Plus, you get to pay over $300 for technology that was "designed" and built for less than $2. The "processor" unit was designed in 1967 and allows all the functionality of the most advanced microchip devices of its era. It has both on and off modes. (Note: off mode available only while unplugged.)

Actually, the real reason for the high cost of the device is to cover the costs of all the customer support that they must provide and to cover the costs of all of the returned units. The question is not IF, but WHEN you will find yourself hunched over your cat's feces floating in a pool of fetid water, picking small plastic pellets out of the opaque, pungent water with your fingers so that you can get the device put back together.

And your cats will thank you by depositing their love bundles beside the machine that's half filled with water and beeping away forlornly if you happen to be away when it fails.

We have three cats, they had no trouble adjusting to the machine over about a week. The small plastic pellets getting everywhere in the house is not really any big deal. Roomba takes care of most of them well. We've now had the machine for three months. We received a replacement base last week for a leaky drain hose. We've called their customer service line enough times that we now know the "secret" diagnostic techniques of their experts. We don't know if we're going to keep it or return it. If we keep it, we're definitely going to install an exhaust fan in the laundry room, and set it to a timer to go when the unit is on. For some reason there are little bits of poo that fall between the tines of the hopper, and they get slow baked every time the unit dries itself. The stench is really outstanding. It's hard to describe. I'm a doctor, and I've rarely ever smelled anything so bad.

My recommendation is to wait for the next generation cat sanitation solution. That device will need to be a complete redesign to solve the myriad of problems with this unfortunate device. To say something positive, the customer support line is manned by kind, well-meaning kids who really do feel badly that you're having a hard time with your mechanical poo soup maker.

If you do buy this device, get some thick rubber gloves and a couple of towels that you won't use for anything else.