Hi. This is my first time posting on this site, and this may be dated, but I've had my Tittle X for nearly a year now and I've done extensive testing and gameplay with it. Fundamentally this is a fantastic device and it does seem to record nearly all of the measurable parameters needed to model the physics of a ball strike. I have this setup on my homebrew garage simulator and I've experimented heavily with real ball impacts. You can google for 'TittleX with real balls" if you would like to see it in action.
The title had a number of issue in their software drivers and firmware initially that would lock into a hook. Someone mentioned a 15 degree outside in hook. That has all been solved with the latest updates. So if you do get one of these devices, make sure you do the upgrades to the firmware and PC driver software.
Tittle will take the impact from real clubs using real ball strikes. The flight is physics is calculated pretty well but there are some caveats. First, the Tittle 'Cradle' (or clips) will break under real ball impacts. I've designed a very simple home-made cradle for the Title that works very well and is easy, quick and cheap to make.
The other caveat is ball flight physics. The tittle software does not include a parameter for ball mass in the swing, so, on impacts, when the club velocity drops off the software records it as a slower swing, and the ball flight distance will be reflected in that. So with real balls, the flight is usually 20-30% short of a normal carry distance. E6 has a parameter called BOOST that can be used to adjust this 17-18% seems optimal for drivers. Tapper that down as you move down the irons to 0% for the putter. Plastic and foam balls need no adjustments.
Personally, I like TittleX over R-motion, even though the physics is modeled better with the R-motion. Tittle has better electronic hardware and the game software is better. There is a lot of room for improvement with Tittle and it's hard finding any support or way to provide ideas to the company. I really hope that in the next installment of their software, an option for ball type is included (to adjust ball mass), as well as a table for club-lengths.
Happy Titling.