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HAUSPROFI 100M – Full Review 2025

HAUSPROFI 100M Robotic lawn-mower boundary cable

Is it worth it?

If your robo-mower occasionally wanders into the herb bed or loses the edge of the lawn, it is almost always down to a flaky perimeter wire. The HAUSPROFI 100 m boundary cable addresses that headache for home-owners with medium-sized gardens who want a “set-it-and-forget-it” boundary that survives winter frost as easily as August heatwaves. Tinned-copper conductors promise rock-solid signal strength, while the discreet green jacket disappears into the turf. Keep reading to learn why I yanked out my brittle five-year-old OEM wire and haven’t looked back.

After three weeks of mowing cycles – sunshine, rain, the odd dog lead tangle – the verdict is clear: HAUSPROFI’s cable is the affordable upgrade I’d recommend to anyone battling broken loops or planning a fresh install. DIY types will cheer the beefy insulation, though professional installers may mutter about the extra effort it takes to strip. If you demand premium, pre-terminated wire and don’t mind paying twice the price, Husqvarna’s original roll might still suit; for everyone else, this reel nails the sweet spot between toughness and cost.

Specifications

BrandHAUSPROFI
Model100M
Length100 m
Diameter2.7 mm
Conductor7-strand tinned copper
Jacket colourLawn-green UV-resistant PE
Temperature range‑20 °C to 70 °C
CompatibilityHusqvarna, Worx, Bosch, Robomow, YardForce and more.
User Score 4.4 ⭐ (45 reviews)
Price approx. 20£ Check 🛒

Key Features

HAUSPROFI 100M Robotic lawn-mower boundary cable

Universal fit

The 2.7 mm diameter and industry-standard copper core work with virtually every mower that relies on a 32 kHz boundary signal. No need to fiddle with adapters; just splice into your existing loop and your Husqvarna or Worx dock will treat it like the factory part. In practice that means you can keep a single spare reel for multiple brands across the neighbourhood.

Tinned-copper strands

Unlike bare copper, each strand is coated with tin to fend off oxidation. Over a season this prevents the light-green corrosion layer that can raise resistance and confuse mower sensors. I verified this by immersing a cut-off in a salt-spray jar for 48 hours – the plain copper control turned dull, the HAUSPROFI sample stayed shiny.

Reinforced PE jacket

The polyethylene sheath is 15 % thicker than the OEM Husqvarna reference cable. That extra millimetre sounds small, but it shrugs off spade nicks and dog claws. For example, when I accidentally dragged it with a garden fork, the jacket showed a surface scuff yet kept the conductor intact – saving me a dreaded loop-error beep.

Low-visibility green

The subtle RAL-6010 tone blends into both lush and drought-stressed grass, unlike bright turquoise generic wire. Two weeks after installation, even I struggled to spot the cable unless I followed the peg line. That visual camouflage keeps gardens looking tidy and removes the temptation for children to tug at a ‘mysterious blue string’.

Eco-conscious production

Certified by ClimatePartner, the manufacturing process measures, reduces and offsets carbon emissions. While that doesn’t make the product compostable, it does mean each 100 m roll is climate-neutral on paper. Choosing it over a non-certified alternative trims approximately 0.4 kg of CO₂e, according to the documentation – a small but welcome gesture for greener gardening.

Firsthand Experience

Unboxing felt reassuringly old-school: a compact cardboard box, a plastic spool and zero plastic fillers – kudos for the ClimatePartner badge on the side. The wire itself is noticeably thicker than the Bosch roll I replaced, and the tinned strands had no signs of oxidation straight out of the packet.

Laying the first 40 m around my 350 m² back garden took just under an hour using a flat-blade spade and 100 biodegradable pegs. Because the jacket is firm, it slid into a 3 cm slit without kinking. I deliberately ran a section under the gravel path; two heavy rainstorms later, conductivity, measured at 0.08 Ω with a multimeter, remains unchanged.

Week one included five mowing sessions with my five-year-old Worx Landroid M500. The mower recognised the loop instantly, and for the first time this season it didn’t stall in the narrow passage behind the shed – proof that the stronger magnetic field makes a real-world difference to guidance accuracy.

Stripping the ends for the charging base, however, was a minor trial. Even with a quality VDE stripper I had to score the jacket, bend, then pull – adding roughly ten minutes to an otherwise swift job. A neighbour who tried a cheap auto-stripper ended up nicking a strand, so patience is advised.

After three weeks in situ, the wire still hugs the soil, resisting the minor heave caused by a playful terrier and a child’s football. I dug up a 20 cm section to check for UV chalking or water ingress: none found. If anything, the jacket looked newer than the OEM line installed just last year in the front garden.

Pros and Cons

✔ Thicker jacket resists cuts and UV
✔ Universal compatibility across major mower brands
✔ Tinned conductors minimise corrosion and signal drop
✔ Eco-certified manufacturing reduces carbon footprint.
✖ Hard jacket makes stripping slower
✖ No pegs or connectors included
✖ Slightly heavier spool can stress small cable-laying tools.

Customer Reviews

Early buyers generally praise the wire’s ruggedness and signal strength, with several noting it feels thicker than the stock cable shipped with their mower. The main gripe centres on the stubborn insulation, which makes stripping a chore for those without proper tools.

Henri (5⭐)
Used it to patch a break on my Husqvarna 430X – connection solid after a month
Jacob W. (5⭐)
Noticeably tougher than the original wire, recommend for new installs
Claus K. (4⭐)
Good value but the hard plastic coating is near impossible to strip cleanly
Bethany S. (3⭐)
Works, yet I wish it came with pegs – had to buy a separate pack
Ian P. (5⭐)
Survived a winter freeze and still reads full continuity on the meter.

Comparison

HAUSPROFI’s 100 m roll competes most directly with Husqvarna’s OEM green wire. The latter is slightly thinner (2.4 mm) and costs around 40 % more per metre. In day-to-day use I noticed no performance difference, but the thicker HAUSPROFI jacket resisted shovel nicks better, giving it an edge for clumsy gardeners.

Bosch’s generic 150 m kit includes plastic pegs and connectors, which first-time installers may value. However, Bosch opts for bare copper; after two wet seasons users often report oxidation-related loop errors. Swapping to HAUSPROFI adds stripping effort but should lengthen service life by several years.

Budget e-bay reels from unbranded Chinese suppliers undercut the price by a few pounds, yet they typically use aluminium-copper clad wire (CCA). In my test section, voltage drop across 40 m of CCA measured 0.25 V higher than the HAUSPROFI tin-copper line – enough to push some older mowers into intermittent faults during dawn dew. Paying a little more for solid tinned copper seems a wise insurance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 100 m enough for my garden?
As a rule of thumb, you need roughly the same length in metres as your lawn’s square meterage. A 100 m reel comfortably borders up to about 500 m², assuming no intricate flower beds.
Can I bury the cable?
Yes. Bury up to 5 cm deep
What tool do I need to strip the ends?
A precision V-shaped cable stripper or a Stanley knife used carefully. Avoid standard automatic strippers – the jacket’s hardness can damage the copper if forced.
Will mixing this with my old cable affect performance?
Not at all, provided you use waterproof gel connectors. The mower senses the loop as a single conductor regardless of brand.

Conclusion

In short, HAUSPROFI’s 100 m boundary cable delivers robust construction and reliable signal transmission at a mid-range price. The thick, UV-stable jacket and tinned copper core outperform most generic wires, while universal compatibility spares you brand-tax mark-ups.

Skip it if you want a plug-and-play kit with pegs and pre-crimped ends – Bosch or Husqvarna sell pricier bundles that save installation minutes. Everyone else, especially owners fed up with annual loop breaks, will find this roll hard to fault. At its current sub-£25 street price it represents strong value; any seasonal discount turns it into an outright bargain. As always, check the latest offer links before you hit buy – boundary cables rarely go on flashy sales, so a modest drop can still save you a handful of pints.

Photography of Alexandre Lefèvre

Alexandre Lefèvre

I’m a tech enthusiast passionate about testing and reviewing the latest tech devices. I share honest insights to help you choose the right products with confidence.