What They Have in Common
Both shoot to ±1 yard accuracy, both lock on flags with pulse vibration confirmation, both have slope with a legal-play switch, and both use magnet mounts. That's the baseline you'd expect at this tier — and both deliver it. Magnification is identical at 6x. From a pure "give me the yardage" standpoint, these rangefinders are equals.
Where They Differ
Display and Optics
The Series 4 Ultra runs an OLED display with manual brightness control. OLED is genuinely good here — the contrast is sharp and readable in low light, which matters if you're playing early morning rounds or dealing with overcast Pacific Northwest conditions. The Titan Elite counters with what Precision Pro calls 6×24 HD optics and a visual target lock indicator. That visual confirmation is a real differentiator: instead of just feeling the vibration, you see a lock signal through the eyepiece. Whether that's worth anything to you depends on how much you trust tactile feedback, but I'd guess some golfers find the visual cue more reliable when they're not sure if they locked the flag or the tree behind it.
Water Resistance and Build Quality
This is where the $100 gap starts to make sense. The Series 4 Ultra is rated IP54 — splash resistant, fine for light rain, not something you want to drop in a puddle. The Titan Elite is IP67, which means it can handle submersion up to 1 meter. Beyond that, the Titan Elite ships in an aluminum shell. Neither product publishes weight, so I can't tell you how much heavier it is in hand, but aluminum builds tend to feel more substantial and hold up better to the general abuse rangefinders take in golf bags. If you're tough on gear, that matters.
Battery and Charging
Here's the thing that will quietly shape how much you like either of these over time. The Series 4 Ultra runs three CR2 batteries. CR2s are available at pretty much any pharmacy, so you're never stuck — but you're also replacing them whenever they die, which adds up. The Titan Elite charges via USB-C and claims around 40 rounds per charge with Bluetooth off (about 10 with it on). For most golfers playing once or twice a week, that's roughly a month between charges. USB-C is now the same cable as your phone, your earbuds, everything — which makes the charging situation genuinely painless.
App, GPS, and Warranty
The Titan Elite connects to the Precision Pro app, which adds GPS functionality and a Find My feature for locating the unit if you set it down and walk off. That Find My feature sounds gimmicky until the one time you leave a rangefinder on the 11th tee box and don't notice until you're in the parking lot. The 3-year warranty is also meaningful — Precision Pro is essentially betting on the product's durability, which offsets some of the brand risk if you're newer to them. The Series 4 Ultra doesn't list an equivalent warranty or GPS features.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Blue Tees Series 4 Ultra if:
- You like the idea of an OLED display and want a rangefinder that's easy to read in whatever light you're handed
- You play casually and battery swaps don't bother you — CR2s are cheap and easy to find
- You want a capable Tier 2 rangefinder and the $100 savings matters (that's a sleeve of Pro V1s and then some)
- You don't care about app connectivity or GPS — you bought a rangefinder, not a golf computer
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite if:
- You're the golfer who has lost or nearly lost a rangefinder at least once — the Find My feature alone might pay for the price difference in peace of mind
- You play in real weather, not just ideal conditions; IP67 means you're not babying it when it starts raining on the back nine
- You want USB-C charging and already live in the USB-C ecosystem — it genuinely simplifies your bag
- You're the kind of person who keeps gear for five or six years and wants the warranty and build quality to back that up
The Bottom Line
The Series 4 Ultra is a good rangefinder. The Titan Elite is a better-equipped one. The $100 gap is real, but look at what you're getting: a more durable build, meaningfully better water resistance, rechargeable via USB-C, GPS integration, a 3-year warranty, and Find My. That's not padding — those are features you'll actually use. The OLED display on the Blue Tees is legitimately nice, and if budget is the constraint, it's not a consolation prize. But if you can stretch to $399, the Titan Elite earns it.
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite.
See Also