What They Have in Common
Both shoot to ±1 yard accuracy and run 6x magnification, which is the standard for this category. Both confirm pin locks with feedback — jolt on the Bushnell, vibration on the Voice Caddie. Water resistance is in the spec on each. That's about where the overlap ends. These two are more different than they are similar.
Where They Differ
Slope — and the Tournament Question
This is the fork in the road. The Tour V6 has no slope mode. Zero. That's not a missing feature — it's a design choice. Bushnell built this one to be tournament-legal out of the box, no toggle required. You hand it to anyone in your group, play it in any sanctioned round, and nobody's checking your device. If you play in club championships, member-guests, or any USGA-governed event, this matters.
The Voice Caddie L6 has slope via their V-Algorithm and includes a slope switch, so you can disable it for competition. That works fine in practice, but here's the honest truth: you'll forget to flip it. Not every time, but once. The Tour V6 sidesteps that entirely.
Display and Optics
The L6 runs an OLED display; the Tour V6 uses LCD. In most conditions this doesn't matter much, but OLED does tend to read cleaner in low light — early morning rounds, overcast days, the kind of fall morning where it's technically legal to tee off but you're questioning your choices. The LCD on the Bushnell is perfectly readable, but it's not as crisp in dim conditions.
Magnification is the same at 6x. Bushnell's PinSeeker with Visual Jolt is a well-established system — you get a ring animation when it locks the flag, which is easy to trust. The L6 uses Pin Tracer with vibration feedback. Both work. Bushnell's is probably the more familiar feel if you've used a rangefinder before.
Build Specs and the BITE Magnet
The Tour V6 weighs 8.7 oz and comes with the BITE magnet, which snaps to your cart bar and stays there. That's legitimately convenient — one of those small features you don't appreciate until you have it and then can't imagine going without. The L6's weight and dimensions aren't published, which is a minor frustration when you're comparing products at this level. No BITE mount mentioned either.
Bushnell's IPX6 rating is a defined standard — it'll handle a real downpour. Voice Caddie lists "water-resistant" without a published rating, which tells you less about what it can handle.
Price
A hundred dollars is real money. That's a new wedge, a couple rounds of green fees, or enough Pro V1s to last most golfers the better part of a season. The L6 earns some of that back with slope included; the Tour V6 charges a premium for brand trust, build transparency, and a clean tournament setup.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Bushnell Tour V6 if:
- You play competitive golf — club events, tournaments, anything with a rules committee — and don't want to think about whether your rangefinder is legal
- You want a rangefinder where every spec is published and the build is fully documented
- The BITE magnet matters to you (and once you've used one, it tends to)
- You're the 12-handicap who plays the same course three times a week and wants something that just works, reliably, for years
Get the Voice Caddie L6 if:
- Slope is important to your game and you're comfortable remembering to toggle it off for competition
- You're newer to rangefinders and $200 gets you in the door without feeling like you compromised badly
- You play casual rounds almost exclusively and a tournament-ready setup isn't relevant to your situation
- You've compared OLED to LCD before and actually care about display quality in low light
The Bottom Line
The Tour V6 costs more and doesn't have slope. That sounds like a bad deal until you consider what you're paying for: a fully documented build, a trusted locking system, BITE magnet convenience, and zero tournament headaches. The L6 is a decent rangefinder with slope for $200, but Voice Caddie doesn't publish its weight or dimensions, and "water-resistant" is doing a lot of vague work on a product you'll use in the rain. Seems like the L6 is priced to compete, not to dominate. For most golfers who play any competitive golf at all, the Tour V6 is the right call.
Get the Bushnell Tour V6.
See Also