What They Have in Common
Both measure to ±1 yard accuracy, offer 6x magnification, and include slope with a legal-play switch. That covers the basics every golfer actually needs. Either one will tell you "it's 162 to the pin, 158 adjusted" and give you the right club. The core job gets done.
Where They Differ
Display and Optics
This is the biggest real-world difference. The NX10 uses an HD LCD display, which reads well in partial shade and sidelight. The Laser Fit uses a dual-color LED — red and black — which is a different technology and a step down in readability for most conditions. HD LCD tends to show more detail and is easier to parse quickly. The Laser Fit's LED display is serviceable, but if you've ever squinted at a budget rangefinder trying to read the number before you lose your lock on the pin, this is the tradeoff you're making.
The NX10 also tops out at 999 yards versus 800 on the Laser Fit. Practically speaking, you won't often need either. But the NX10's extra headroom suggests more capable optics underneath.
Size and Portability
Here's where the Laser Fit earns its name. At 4 oz and 3.4 × 1.5 × 2.2 inches, it's legitimately small — noticeably smaller and lighter than the NX10, which doesn't publish its weight or dimensions (always a minor frustration). The Laser Fit fits in a front pocket without a bulge. If you walk and want the least amount of stuff clipped to your bag, that's a real advantage, not a marketing one.
Battery: Lifetime Replacements vs USB-C Rechargeable
Both approaches have merit, and which one you prefer probably comes down to your habits. The Laser Fit charges via USB-C and claims 8 hours or 40+ rounds on a full charge. That's solid, and USB-C means you can top it off with the same charger as your phone. The NX10 runs on a CR2 battery with Precision Pro's free lifetime replacement program — you register it, and they send you batteries. CR2s are also available at any pharmacy if you find yourself mid-round with a dead rangefinder and no backup.
Seems like Precision Pro built the lifetime battery program specifically to counter the "why doesn't this charge like my phone" objection, and it mostly works. You're never paying for batteries again, which is a real thing over five years of rounds.
Target Acquisition and Measurement Speed
Voice Caddie advertises 0.1-second measurement and includes what they call ball-to-pin triangulation and Pin Tracer. The NX10 has pulse vibration — the standard "I locked the pin" confirmation — and its own target acquisition mode. The Laser Fit's speed claim is aggressive, and the triangulation feature is legitimately useful for picking the flag out when there's a tree line or a group on an adjacent hole. That said, the NX10's pulse vibration is a proven feedback system most golfers already trust.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Precision Pro NX10 Slope if:
- You want a rangefinder that performs well across a full season without babysitting a charge or running out mid-round on a 36-hole day
- You play in mixed conditions — morning rounds, late afternoon sun — and need a display that's actually readable in different light
- You're the 12-handicap who wants one quality rangefinder to keep for years and doesn't want to think about it again
- You're comfortable with the $279 price because the lifetime battery program means it stays at $279 forever
Get the Voice Caddie Laser Fit if:
- You walk and carry a Sunday bag, and every ounce you're not carrying is a win by the 15th hole
- You already charge everything at night and a rangefinder that joins that routine is simpler than dealing with a separate battery
- You're newer to rangefinders and want to spend $199 to figure out how much you actually use one before committing to more
- You play shorter courses and 800 yards of range is more than enough
The Bottom Line
The Laser Fit is a good rangefinder for its price, and the size really is impressive. But the NX10 Slope is the better piece of equipment — better display, longer range, more confident target acquisition, and a battery program that levels the total-cost math over time. The $80 price gap is real, but spread across a few years of use, it's smaller than it looks at checkout.
If the Laser Fit's size genuinely matters to your setup — you walk, you carry light, you want it in your pocket — get the Laser Fit. Otherwise, the NX10 is the pick.
Get the Precision Pro NX10 Slope.
See Also