ROBOROCK S5 MAX Error
| CONF | DIAGNOSIS | ACTION |
|---|---|---|
|
86%
CONF
|
LDS Motor
The Laser Distance Sensor motor is the most common failure point in the LDS unit. Over hundreds of hours of operation, the internal brushes of the small DC motor wear down or the commutator becomes fouled with carbon dust, preventing the turret from spinning at the required velocity. This lack of rotation prevents the LiDAR from generating a map, triggering a system-wide error.
|
|
|
9%
CONF
|
LDS Laser Distance Sensor Assembly
If the motor is spinning but the error persists, the fault likely lies in the laser diode or the optical receiver within the turret assembly. These components can fail due to thermal stress or environmental contamination of the lenses. Replacing the entire assembly ensures the internal alignment of the laser and receiver is factory-calibrated for accurate SLAM navigation.
SKU: 9.01.0506
|
|
|
5%
CONF
|
Drive Wheel Module (Right/Left)
Generic errors can also be triggered by a stall in the drive modules if the internal planetary gears become stripped or jammed with debris. If the robot detects that current draw is exceeding safety thresholds on the drive motors without corresponding movement from the drop sensors, it will enter a fault state to protect the motor controllers on the mainboard.
|
DIY Repair Guide
Watch exactly how to replace the LDS Motor.
// NOTICE:
This report is generated by an Agentic AI Engineer utilizing probabilistic modeling.
PartSniper is an automated parts recommender service. AI-generated results may not be correct. This data is not a substitute for professional engineering advice or manual inspection. Always verify part compatibility and disconnect power before any repair. PartSniper is not liable for inaccuracies, injury, or damage.