What They Have in Common
Both lock in at 6x magnification with ±1 yard accuracy, which is the functional baseline for a quality rangefinder. Both have magnet mounts for cart attachment. Both give you a visual confirmation when they've locked the flag — Bushnell calls it Visual Jolt, Precision Pro calls it Visual Target Lock. And both are water-resistant enough to survive a normal rainy round.
Where They Differ
Slope and Tournament Legality
This is the biggest split. The Tour V6 has no slope mode at all — that's not an oversight, it's a deliberate choice. You never have to think about it. If you play in net or gross competitions with USGA rules in effect, you're legal by default. No toggle, no forgetting.
The Titan Elite has slope and a slope switch to toggle it off. In theory that works the same way. In practice, you'll toggle slope off before a tournament and turn it back on Sunday afternoon — and then three weeks later you'll show up to a member-guest and hand your playing partner a slope-adjusted yardage on the 72nd hole. It happens. Honest admission: the slope switch exists precisely because golfers forget.
If slope data genuinely helps your game in casual rounds, the Titan Elite gives you that. If it's just one more thing to manage, the Tour V6's cleaner setup is a real feature.
Battery and Build
The Titan Elite runs on USB-C rechargeable battery, rated around 40 rounds without Bluetooth. That's solid. The Tour V6 runs on a CR2 lithium battery. CR2s are at every pharmacy and golf shop in the country, which matters when you realize at the first tee that you haven't charged anything in two weeks. Rechargeable is more convenient day-to-day; swappable is more recoverable in a pinch.
Build-wise, Precision Pro is explicit about the aluminum shell and rates the Titan Elite at IP67 — dust-tight and submersible to one meter. The Tour V6 is IPX6, which handles rain and splashing fine but isn't rated for submersion. For most golfers this distinction never matters. If you play in serious weather or have a history of dropping things in water hazards, IP67 is the better spec.
Extra Features — GPS, App, Find My
The Titan Elite pairs with the Precision Pro app for GPS and front/middle/back yardages. It also has a Find My feature, which I assume is for the inevitable moment when you leave it on the cart and drive off. These are real additions you won't find on the Tour V6. Whether you'll use the GPS app depends on whether you're someone who already uses a GPS — if you are, having it baked into the rangefinder ecosystem is convenient. If you're not, it's a nice-to-have you might open twice.
The Titan Elite also comes with a three-year warranty. Bushnell doesn't publish equivalent warranty terms in the spec data here. That gap probably reflects Precision Pro using the warranty to offset the brand recognition difference — that's my read, anyway.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Tour V6 if:
- You play competitive golf regularly and want a rangefinder that's tournament-legal without a second thought
- You're the club player who shows up to Monday qualifiers, member-guests, or any USGA-governed round — the no-slope design removes one category of error entirely
- You prefer CR2 batteries because you've been burned by a dead rechargeable mid-round before
- You want to spend $100 less and keep it simple
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite if:
- You play mostly casual rounds where slope data actually changes your club selection, and you want a single device that handles rangefinding and GPS in one
- You're a 10-handicap who plays the same two courses on rotation and wants a rangefinder with a real feature set that'll last five or six years
- You play early-morning rounds in serious fall weather and want IP67 protection without worrying about it
- The three-year warranty and aluminum build matter to you — some people want to buy once
The Bottom Line
The Tour V6 is a cleaner, lighter, cheaper rangefinder built around one job: locking the flag cleanly in a tournament-legal package. The Titan Elite is a more capable device — slope, rechargeable, GPS app, better water rating, longer warranty — at a $99 premium. The question is whether those additions are worth it for how you actually play.
For the golfer who plays competitive rounds even occasionally, I'd go with the Tour V6. The no-slope design isn't a limitation; it's the point. For everyone else who wants more features and is fine spending $399, the Titan Elite earns it.
Get the Bushnell Tour V6.
See Also