Key features
Cordless pool routine
The biggest everyday advantage here is the cordless design. You charge it, seal it back up, press the button, and drop it in.
That sounds basic, but it removes one of the biggest annoyances of traditional robotic cleaners. If you hate dealing with floating cable memory, tangles, or heavy corded units, this is the part of the Scuba S1 that most directly improves ownership.
Wall cleaning without app dependence
This model is positioned for floor, wall, and waterline work, and the on-device controls matter because you are not forced into an app-first setup just to choose a cleaning route.
For buyers who want simple operation, that is a real plus. The caveat is that route behavior is not equally convincing in every pool, so the feature is valuable most when your pool shape is fairly robot-friendly and your goal is regular upkeep rather than perfect path predictability.
Top-load filter and cleanup
A 3 L top-load filter is one of the most practical parts of the design. Lift the cover, remove the basket, hose it out, and get back to the pool.
That lowers the maintenance burden enough to make frequent cleaning more realistic. It is especially helpful for owners who want the robot to become part of a weekly routine instead of a machine they avoid because emptying it is a chore.
Best fit for ongoing maintenance
The Scuba S1 makes the most sense as a maintenance robot, not as a miracle worker for every kind of debris.
It can handle regular dirt, leaves, and some sand well enough to reduce manual vacuuming substantially. If your pool often collects ultra-fine silt or you expect one-pass cleanup after algae treatment, this is where the limits show up faster and a more filtration-focused alternative becomes the safer route.