Xenarc RT106-Pro Review
The Xenarc RT106-Pro survives drops and dust, but its high cost and middling specs make it a hard sell for anyone outside of specific industrial fields.
The 30-Second Version
The Xenarc RT106-Pro is an ultra-rugged Windows tablet built for extreme environments. You pay a huge premium for its durability, not its middling performance. Only buy this if your job requires its specific military-grade certifications.
Overview
The Xenarc RT106-Pro is a tablet that makes a promise: it can survive where others can't. With an IP65/NEMA4 rating and a military-grade ruggedized enclosure, this is a device built for the field, the factory floor, or any environment where a standard tablet would be a liability.
Under the hood, it's a different story. This is a Windows tablet with modest specs—64GB of storage and unknown RAM and CPU—aimed at running industrial software, not for entertainment or casual use. It's a specialized tool, and its performance scores reflect that niche focus.
Performance
Performance is squarely in the middle of the pack, which is exactly what you'd expect for a rugged tablet. Our database shows its CPU and GPU scores land in the mid-40s percentile, meaning it's fine for basic tasks and the proprietary apps it's designed for, but it's not a speed demon. The 10.1-inch screen ranks in the 28th percentile, so while the 1920x1200 resolution is decent, color and brightness likely won't wow you. It gets the job done, but that's the point.
Pros & Cons
Pros
Cons
- Below average connectivity (22th percentile) 22th
- Below average feature (27th percentile) 27th
- Below average screen (28th percentile) 28th
- Below average storage (31th percentile) 31th
Specifications
Full Specifications
Memory & Storage
| Storage | 64 GB |
Display
| Size | 10.1" |
| Resolution | 1920 (Full HD) |
Value & Pricing
At $1,567, the value proposition is tough. You're paying a massive premium for the rugged casing and certifications, not for cutting-edge tech. For that price, you could buy a top-tier consumer tablet and a very durable case and still have money left over. The value only makes sense if your company requires that specific IP65/NEMA4 rating and can't risk a third-party case failing. For everyone else, it's a hard sell.
Price History
vs Competition
Stacked against its top competitors, the RT106-Pro lives in a different world. The Apple iPad Pro or Microsoft Surface Pro will run circles around it in performance, screen quality, and app ecosystem. But they'll also shatter if dropped from a forklift. The Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus offers better media features for a fraction of the cost. The only real comparison is other ruggedized Windows tablets, and even there, you'd need to scrutinize the exact specs and certifications to see if this one justifies its cost.
| Spec | Xenarc RT106-Pro | Apple iPad Pro Apple 11" iPad Pro M5 Chip (Standard Glass, 512GB, | Microsoft Surface Pro Microsoft 13" Surface Pro Copilot+ PC (11th | Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 Samsung 12.4" Galaxy Tab S10+ 256GB Multi-Touch | Lenovo Yoga Tab Series Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus | HP GPD Win MAX 2 2025 Handheld Gaming PC with AMD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPU | - | Apple M5 | Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite X1E-84-100 | MediaTek 9300 | Qualcomm® Snapdragon® 8 Gen 3, QCM8650 | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 |
| RAM (GB) | - | 12 | 32 | 12 | 16 | 32 |
| Storage (GB) | 64 | 512 | 1000 | 256 | 256 | 2048 |
| Screen | 10.1" 1920x1200 | 11" 2420x1668 | 13" 2880x1920 | 12.4" 2800x1752 | 12.7" 2944x1840 | 10.1" 1920x1200 |
| OS | - | iPadOS | Windows 11 Home | Android 14 | Android 14 | Windows 11 Home |
| Stylus | false | true | true | true | false | false |
| Cellular | false | false | false | false | false | false |
Common Questions
Q: Can this tablet run standard Windows software like Office?
Yes, it runs full Windows, so it can handle Office and other desktop programs, but its average performance specs mean it won't be the fastest experience.
Q: Is the screen bright enough to use outdoors?
While it has a toughened touchscreen, its overall screen quality ranks in the 28th percentile, so outdoor visibility might be a challenge compared to brighter consumer tablets.
Q: Why is it so expensive compared to a regular tablet?
The high cost comes almost entirely from the ruggedized, waterproof enclosure and the military-grade testing certifications, not from high-end internal components.
Who Should Skip This
Students, media consumers, and general users should skip this immediately. You're paying for armor you don't need while getting underwhelming specs for the price. If you just want a durable tablet for home use, get a standard model and a good protective case. It'll be better in every way that matters to you.
Verdict
Buy this only if your procurement department has "IP65/NEMA4" and "military-grade" as non-negotiable line items on a spec sheet. It's for field technicians, warehouse managers, or surveyors who need a Windows device that can survive harsh conditions. For literally any other use—students, entertainment, general productivity—this is the wrong tool, and a wildly overpriced one at that.