What They Have in Common
Both shoot to ±1 yard accuracy, both offer slope with a legal-play toggle, and both use 6x magnification. You'll get reliable yardages out of either one. The flag-acquisition tech has different names — Precision Pro calls theirs Visual Target Lock, TecTecTec calls theirs Hyper Read — but the job is the same: lock onto the pin, confirm with a pulse or beep, move on.
Where They Differ
Build Quality and Water Resistance
The Titan Elite has an aluminum shell and IP67 certification, which means it can be submerged in up to a meter of water for 30 minutes. That's not a round-saving spec most golfers ever test, but it does mean it can take a downpour, a cart-path tumble, or an accidental bag-bottom soaking without complaint. The ULT-S Pro is rated rainproof — fine for a normal round in the drizzle, but not in the same league. If you play in genuinely rough weather or you're just harder on equipment than you'd like to admit, that's a real difference.
Display and Optics
This is where the ULT-S Pro earns its spot at the table. It uses a red TOLED display with four luminosity settings. TOLED displays tend to be crisper in variable light than traditional LCDs, and having four brightness levels means you can actually read it at 6:30am in October when the light is flat and weird. The Titan Elite has what Precision Pro describes as HD optics with visual target lock, but the spec sheet doesn't give you the same level of display detail. The ULT-S Pro also has OIS — optical image stabilization — which helps if you're a little shaky or you're squinting into the eyepiece while still walking. Seems like TecTecTec prioritized the optical experience specifically, and it shows.
Battery and Connectivity
Here's where the Titan Elite pulls clear. It's USB-C rechargeable and rated for about 40 rounds without Bluetooth active — drop it on a charger between rounds and forget about it. The ULT-S Pro runs on CR123 lithium batteries. CR123s aren't hard to find, and they last a long time, but you do have to remember to have them. The Titan Elite also connects to a companion app with GPS and front-middle-back yardages, plus a Find My feature if you leave it in the cart. That's a meaningful upgrade over a standalone rangefinder if you actually use app-based GPS.
Warranty and Brand Backing
Precision Pro ships the Titan Elite with a 3-year warranty, which is notably longer than what most brands offer at this tier. TecTecTec doesn't list a warranty in the spec data, which isn't necessarily a red flag, but it's not a selling point either. Probably because Precision Pro has built their brand partly on customer service and backing their gear — that's a pattern with them. That 3-year coverage matters if you're spending $399 and want peace of mind.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite if:
- You want one device that handles rangefinder, slope, GPS, and app connectivity without carrying a separate unit
- You're the type who plugs your phone in every night — adding a USB-C rangefinder to that habit is genuinely painless
- You play 40+ rounds a year and want a rangefinder that can take real weather without you worrying about it
- You want the warranty safety net on a near-$400 purchase
Get the TecTecTec ULT-S Pro if:
- You're the golfer who plays early-morning weekend rounds and has struggled to read a display in flat, low light — the four-level TOLED is legitimately good for that
- You don't want to think about charging anything and prefer the simplicity of swapping in a fresh CR123 when the battery runs low
- You want optical stabilization to steady the image, especially if you're sighting flags on longer par 5s or windy days
- The $49 savings matters to you — it's not nothing
The Bottom Line
The Titan Elite is the better-built, better-connected rangefinder, and the 3-year warranty is worth something on its own. But the ULT-S Pro isn't just a budget consolation — its TOLED display and OIS are real advantages that the Titan Elite doesn't match on paper. If the connectivity and aluminum build matter to you, pay the extra $49. If you'd rather have exceptional optics and a unit you never have to charge, the TecTecTec is a legitimate choice at $350.
I'd go with the Titan Elite. The rechargeable battery, the IP67 rating, and the GPS app add up to a more complete package, and the 3-year warranty makes it easier to justify spending close to $400.
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite.
See Also