What They Have in Common
Both shoot to ±1 yard accuracy, run 6x magnification, and mount to your cart with a magnetic clip. Both have LCD displays with some form of flag-lock confirmation — Visual Jolt on the Bushnell, Visual Target Lock on the Titan. Either one will give you a reliable yardage on a normal approach shot. The baseline is solid on both sides.
Where They Differ
Slope Mode (and Whether It Matters to You)
This is the real fork in the road. The Tour V6 has no slope — it's tournament-legal out of the box because there's nothing to switch off. The Titan Slope has a physical slope switch on the body, which means it gives you adjusted yardages with slope on and raw yardages with slope off. You'll toggle it off for tournaments. Honest admission: you'll probably forget sometimes. But if you're a regular recreational golfer who plays the same courses and wants to actually use slope for practice rounds and weekend play, the Titan gives you that. The V6 just doesn't.
Water Resistance and Build
IP67 vs IPX6. The difference matters more than it sounds. IPX6 means the Tour V6 handles rain and splashing — totally fine for most rounds. IP67 adds submersion protection up to 1 meter for 30 minutes. Combined with the Titan's aluminum shell, it's a meaningfully more rugged piece of gear. If you play in genuinely nasty conditions or have a habit of leaving rangefinders in the rain, that aluminum housing and IP67 rating are worth knowing about. Bushnell doesn't publish weight or dimensions on this page either, but the V6 comes in at 8.7 oz — Precision Pro didn't publish weight or size for the Titan, which is a minor annoyance when you're trying to compare them.
Range
The V6 tops out at 1,300 yards with 500+ to a flag. The Titan lists up to 999 yards total. For real-world golf — flags at 50 to 250 yards, maybe a layup at 280 — neither number limits you. The extra range on the V6 is mostly a marketing figure. You're not ranging a pin at 900 yards.
Warranty and Brand
Precision Pro backs the Titan with a 3-year warranty. Bushnell doesn't publish warranty details in the spec block here. That warranty gap is worth noting — seems like Precision Pro uses it to close the brand recognition gap with Bushnell, and honestly, it works. Three years on a $329 device is a real commitment. Bushnell is the dominant name in golf rangefinders and you'll see their logo at basically every club in the country, which counts for something in terms of customer service and replacement parts access — but the warranty terms aren't in front of me, so I'm not going to overstate that.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Bushnell Tour V6 if:
- You play a mix of casual rounds and the occasional club tournament and want one rangefinder that's legal in both without flipping a switch or worrying about it
- You're a 15-handicap who just wants a reliable yardage fast and Bushnell's name means something to you
- You or your playing partner already uses CR2 batteries — they're at every pharmacy in the country, which matters if you're mid-round and the thing dies
- You want a lighter, more compact form factor (8.7 oz is genuinely easy to carry)
Get the Precision Pro Titan Slope if:
- You play mostly recreational rounds and want slope for approach shots on hilly tracks — you're the golfer who actually changes how they club based on elevation
- You're hard on gear. You've left a rangefinder in the cart in a downpour before. The IP67 and aluminum body are there for you.
- The 3-year warranty matters to you — three years of coverage on a $329 device is meaningful peace of mind
- You want slope mode without spending $400+
The Bottom Line
Thirty dollars separates these, and the Titan Slope gives you slope mode, a tougher build, and a longer warranty for that extra money. If slope is something you'd actually use — and most recreational golfers would — that's a real value advantage. The Tour V6 is the better pick if you play in events where slope has to be off, or if you want the Bushnell name and CR2 battery convenience. But if you're buying for regular golf and don't have tournament restrictions driving the decision, the Titan Slope is the smarter buy at $329.
Get the Precision Pro Titan Slope.
See Also