What They Have in Common
Both are 6x magnification rangefinders with slope mode and a slope-switch toggle for tournament play. Both have magnetic mounts and pulse vibration to confirm the lock. They're in the same price tier, aimed at the same golfer — someone who wants slope without paying flagship money. That's where the overlap ends.
Where They Differ
Accuracy — and It's Not Close
This is the biggest difference on the sheet. The PF260 Tour is rated at ±0.4 yards. The NX9 Slope is rated at ±1 yard. That's more than twice the margin. In practice, ±1 yard is fine for most approach shots — you're not going to be standing on the 7th fairway agonizing over whether it's 147 or 148. But if you're someone who actually uses these numbers to dial in your wedges, the tighter tolerance matters. The PF260 Tour wins this category outright.
Range
The PF260 Tour maxes out at 1,100 yards. The NX9 Slope tops at 900. Neither of these numbers is a real constraint in normal play — you're not ranging a par-5 from 900 yards and hitting driver. But flagging range matters, and on bigger courses or into a deep sunset, the extra headroom is there if you need it. Slight edge to Mileseey.
Battery Setup
Here's where it gets interesting. The PF260 Tour runs on a removable rechargeable battery — rated at 2-3 rounds per charge, which is honest and practical. You can swap it out if it drains, and carry a spare. The NX9 Slope has what Precision Pro calls a "lifetime battery replacement program," which means if your battery goes, they'll handle it. That's not a spec, it's a service commitment, and it's a good one — especially three years from now when most rechargeable cells start degrading. Whether it's actually more convenient depends on how often you forget to charge things. Call it a hunch, but most golfers are going to prefer never worrying about it.
Optics and Display
The PF260 Tour uses a transmissive LCD, which is backlit and tends to read better in low light and overcast conditions. The NX9 Slope lists a standard LCD without that specification. Reading a rangefinder display mostly happens in the shade of your palm, but early morning rounds or overcast autumn days are where a transmissive display earns its keep.
Warranty and Brand
The PF260 Tour comes with a 5-year warranty. The NX9 Slope offers 2 years. Mileseey is the less established brand in the U.S. market — seems like the longer warranty is there partly to offset that, and honestly, it's a fair trade. Precision Pro has a stronger domestic reputation and a customer service track record that golfers talk about. That's worth something if you've never held a Mileseey in your hands.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour if:
- You want the best accuracy at this price point and you're actually going to use slope data to manage your 140-yard wedge distances
- You play early mornings or shaded courses where a transmissive LCD display is going to be easier to read
- You're comfortable with a lesser-known brand because a 5-year warranty and better specs are enough to earn your trust
- You keep a backup battery in your bag already — you're the type who's just organized that way
Get the Precision Pro NX9 Slope if:
- You're the golfer who's had a rangefinder die mid-round because you forgot to charge it Tuesday and want someone else to handle the battery situation forever
- You've bought Precision Pro before, or your playing partner has one and it's never given them grief — brand familiarity is real and it matters
- You're okay with the wider accuracy margin and mostly care about confident flag locks and a rangefinder that works without thinking about it
- $30 more for a brand you recognize and a service program you understand feels like an easy call
The Bottom Line
On paper, the PF260 Tour is the better rangefinder: tighter accuracy, longer range, better display spec, and a longer warranty — all for $30 less. That's a clean sweep of the spec comparison. But Precision Pro's lifetime battery program is genuinely useful and the brand carries real goodwill among recreational golfers. If specs drive your purchase, the Mileseey wins. If you've been burned by no-name gear before and want a brand with a support structure behind it, the NX9 Slope isn't a mistake.
I'd take the PF260 Tour. The accuracy gap is the kind of thing you actually notice over a full season of approach shots.
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour.