Profitec Pro 400 vs Quick Mill Rubino Plus (0981P)

The crowd’s default against the challenger.

The Rubino Plus (0981P) runs ~57% more (listed in different currencies) — the split below is what the gap buys.

Profitec Pro 400

Profitec

Community default
Pro 400

US$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 Rubino Plus (0981P)

Quick Mill

Rubino Plus (0981P)

US$2,699–2,990

The Rubino Plus fits a proper HX workflow with an E61 group and genuine PID into one of the narrowest stainless chassis at this price point. Accept that it is still a vibratory-pump tank-onl…

Full record & live prices →

The split

Where they actually differ

On 9 of 11 measures these two tie. The 2 rows below are the entire argument.

Pro 400

Rubino Plus (0981P)

Ready when you are

Pro 400 leads, decisively

~10 min· ~15 min

The price

Pro 400 costs less, decisively

CA$2,210–2,700· US$2,699–2,990

Forgiving to learn on

Pro 400 leads, clearly

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…

Rubino Plus (0981P): Appliance-neutral Italian industrial aesthetic, no design awards cited in purchase decisions — not a kitchen-statement machine.

Only the Rubino Plus (0981P): PID temperature 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

drag to look around
Pro 400 claims 22.8 × 44.8 cm of a standard 60 cm counter and stands 37.2 cm tall 7.799999999999997 cm to spare under standard 45 cm uppers. Rubino Plus (0981P) stands beside it, dashed, for size. The small block is a mug; the counter grid is 10 cm.

So — which one?

Take the Pro 400 if —

  • Patience is not your virtue at 6 a.m.
  • The difference stays in your pocket — or goes into beans
  • You want the more forgiving of the two

Take the Rubino Plus (0981P) if —

  • You want the temperature argument settled

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.

For the row-by-row readers

The whole sheet, side by side

Matching rows fade back — the ink is where they differ.

Pro 400

Rubino Plus (0981P)

Type

Heat exchanger (HX)

Heat exchanger (HX)

Heat-up time

~10 min

~15 min

Steam power

3.5/5

3.5/5

Brew + steam at once

Yes

Yes

Guest recovery

3/5

3/5

Shot quality ceiling

3.5/5

3.5/5

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

10 cm

Workflow demand

3/5

3.5/5

Maintenance

3/5

3/5

Noise

3/5

3/5

Build longevity

4/5

4/5

Dimensions

22.8 × 44.8 × 37.2 cm

26.5 × 45 × 36.5 cm

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.
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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.

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