Is Tuff Cable the same as ZMesh — what is the difference?

Tuff Cable and ZMesh are both Heatizon low-voltage heating elements and both are ETL listed under UL Standard 1588 for under-roof snow melting — but they are designed for different installation methods. Tuff Cable is a round copper cable that must always be embedded in a heatsink material (concrete, asphalt, mortar, Invizimelt panel). ZMesh is a flat bronze mesh that lays directly beneath flooring or roofing without any embed. Tuff Cable is the right choice where a heatsink is present or required — driveways, metal roofs, floor overlays. ZMesh is the right choice where no embed is possible or desired — under non-metal shingles, hardwood floors, and carpet.

What is Tuff Cable’s warranty?

Tuff Cable carries an industry-leading 25-year manufacturer’s warranty — the longest available for any electric radiant heating cable in its category. The warranty reflects the cable’s construction: 10-gauge coated copper heating cable that gets embedded in a protective heatsink, with footage marks for verifiable installation, and a low-voltage design that reduces electrical stress on the insulation over time. Heatizon has documented installations from decades ago that remain fully operational.

What voltage does Tuff Cable operate at?

Tuff Cable is a low-voltage system powered by a step-down transformer that reduces the supply voltage — typically 120V, 208V, 240V, or 277V AC — to 65 volts or less at the cable. This low operating voltage is one of Tuff Cable’s key safety advantages over line-voltage systems, and it also allows the cable to be cut and spliced in the field, and to be installed in surfaces where line-voltage systems are not permitted or practical.