What They Have in Common
Both sit at Tier 2, both deliver ±1 yard accuracy, and both have slope with a tournament-legal switch. Pulse vibration confirms your lock on both. They're priced within $50 of each other, which makes this a real decision and not just a budget call. Neither publishes weight or dimensions, which is mildly annoying when you're trying to figure out what fits in your bag pocket.
Where They Differ
Optics and Display
This is the PRO LX's best argument. Seven times magnification against the Titan Elite's 6x is a real difference — you'll notice it on long approach shots or when you're trying to pin a flag that's tucked behind a bunker. The dual OLED display (red on black) tends to be high-contrast in tough light conditions, which is exactly when you need it most. Nobody reads a rangefinder in ideal lighting; you're squinting into it with the sun behind the flag or trying to see a white number against a washed-out sky. The PRO LX's display is built for those moments.
The Titan Elite uses HD optics with what Precision Pro calls visual target lock — you get a confirmation indicator when the unit locks — but the 6x glass is a step behind.
Water Protection and Build
IP67 is the Titan Elite's quiet flex. That's full submersion protection, not just splash resistance. The PRO LX is water-resistant, which covers rain and the occasional dew-soaked morning, but it's not in the same category. If you play through bad weather, or you're the person who keeps playing when everyone else runs to the shelter, this matters. Probably because Precision Pro is positioning the Titan Elite as a premium everyday tool rather than a fair-weather device — that's my read, anyway.
The Titan Elite also uses an aluminum shell. The PRO LX's build materials aren't specified in the same way.
Battery and Charging
USB-C rechargeability on the Titan Elite is a bigger deal than it sounds. CR2 batteries are fine until you need one on a Sunday afternoon when every pharmacy nearby is closed. The Titan Elite gets roughly 40 rounds on a charge with Bluetooth off, dropping to around 10 with Bluetooth on — so if you're using the app features constantly, plan accordingly. The PRO LX rates battery life in "measures" (approximately 5,800), which is an honest metric but harder to translate into rounds. Call it a hunch, but 5,800 triggers is probably a full season for most golfers.
GPS, App Integration, and Extras
The Titan Elite connects to the Precision Pro app, which adds GPS front/middle/back yardages and a Find My feature. That last one is either useless or essential depending on how often you leave your rangefinder on a cart — no judgment. The PRO LX doesn't list app or GPS integration, so what you see is what you get: a standalone rangefinder.
The Titan Elite also carries a 3-year warranty. Shot Scope's warranty terms aren't listed in the specs here. A three-year warranty at $399 shifts the long-term value math meaningfully.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Shot Scope PRO LX if:
- The 7x optics are your priority. You play longer courses where identifying a far flag quickly matters, and you want the sharpest view through the eyepiece.
- You want to spend $349 on a clean, no-frills rangefinder with no apps to manage, no Bluetooth to drain your battery, no ecosystem to keep up with.
- You're the golfer who shoots in the 70s and wants precise, fast reads on tight pins — the dual OLED contrast makes a difference when you need to pick a number quickly.
- You don't play in the rain and you're not worried about full submersion.
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite if:
- You're the golfer who plays 60+ rounds a year and wants one rangefinder that covers everything: slope, GPS, long battery life, and a warranty that keeps it covered for three seasons.
- You play early mornings in October when carts are wet and clubs are dripping — IP67 means you're not nervous about it.
- You've lost a rangefinder before and the Find My feature sounds less silly in retrospect.
- You want USB-C charging and fewer batteries to track down.
The Bottom Line
Fifty dollars separates these two, and they each give you something the other doesn't. The PRO LX has better glass. The Titan Elite has better protection, better longevity features, GPS, and a three-year warranty. For most golfers playing most of the time, the Titan Elite's package is the stronger long-term buy — the rechargeability alone removes a recurring hassle, and IP67 is real protection that water-resistant isn't.
If you genuinely prioritize optics and you don't care about the extras, the PRO LX earns its $349. But I'd go with the Titan Elite.
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite.
See Also