Profitec Pro 400 vs Quick Mill Rapida
The crowd’s default against the challenger.
The Rapida runs ~13% more (listed in different currencies) — the split below is what the gap buys.

Profitec
Community defaultUS$1,599–1,699 · CA$2,210–2,700
A well-executed compact HX that undercuts the Rocket Appartamento on features and price while matching it on build quality; the three-position temperature switch narrows the HX temperature-m…
Full record & live prices →
Quick Mill
US$1,900–2,200
The Rapida gives lever enthusiasts a PID-stabilised HX copper boiler under a full stainless steel chassis, with a pump-assisted spring that hands off from 11 bars to a natural ~9.5–5.5 bar d…
Full record & live prices →The split
Where they actually differ
On 6 of 10 measures these two tie. The 4 rows below are the entire argument.
Pro 400
Rapida
Ready when you are
Pro 400 leads, decisively
~10 min· ~15 min
Forgiving to learn on
Pro 400 leads, clearly
Built to last
Rapida leads, clearly
Quiet operation
Rapida leads, clearly
The price
Pro 400 costs less, clearly
CA$2,210–2,700· US$1,900–2,200
weakerstronger
The counter’s vote
Looks barely figure in either machine’s record — the counter can sit this one out.
Pro 400: Clean, understated German industrial design; described as "stylish" and "kitchen-approval friendly" in purchase talk, but not a polarizing showpiece — competent aesthetic that does not detract from…
Rapida: Described by owners as visually appealing and "sexy" — modest design-driven appeal in the specialty machine context, but neither award-cited nor a primary purchase driver.
Only the Rapida: PID temperature control.
Only the Rapida: flow control.
Where they tie: milk & steam · shot ceiling · back-to-back drinks · reliability record · parts & repair — don’t let a spec sheet invent a difference.
On the counter
The size difference, to scale
So — which one?
Take the Pro 400 if —
- Patience is not your virtue at 6 a.m.
- You want the more forgiving of the two
- The difference stays in your pocket — or goes into beans
Take the Rapida if —
- You are buying once
- There are sleepers to protect
- You want the temperature argument settled
- You want more dials, not fewer
Both columns reading true? Take the Pro 400 and put the difference into fresh, roast-dated beans — they move the cup more than this choice will.
Known weak points
Pro 400
No specific documented failures reported in community record; HX machines generally exhibit temperature-swing behaviors but not mechanical failure modes specific to Pro 400.
Rapida
Recurring shipping damage incidents reported; minor design engineering vulnerabilities in transit, not inherent defects.
For the row-by-row readers
The whole sheet, side by side
Matching rows fade back — the ink is where they differ.
Pro 400
Rapida
Type
Heat exchanger (HX)
Heat exchanger (HX)
Heat-up time
~10 min
~15 min
Steam power
3.5/5
3/5
Brew + steam at once
Yes
Yes
Guest recovery
3/5
3/5
Shot quality ceiling
3.5/5
4/5
PID temperature control
No
Yes
Milk system
Manual steam wand
Manual steam wand
Removable brew group
No
No
Hot-water tap
Yes
Yes
Cup clearance
9 cm
—
Workflow demand
3/5
4/5
Maintenance
3/5
3/5
Noise
3/5
2/5
Build longevity
4/5
5/5
Dimensions
22.8 × 44.8 × 37.2 cm
32 × 48 × 75 cm
Flow control
—
Yes
One owner each
“It is a pragmatic HX for people who want café milk and stable espresso in a tight space without stepping up to a dual boiler price.”
“It feels really well built, and I think it looks damn sexy.”
Wrong match-up? Change one side → — any two on file compare.
Still torn?
This page weighs them against each other. The finder weighs them against your mornings.
Two minutes of questions — milk, noise, budget, space — scored across everything on file. It’s honest when the answer is neither of these.
Take the two-minute finder →