What They Have in Common
Both offer 6x magnification, slope mode with a legal-play switch, and a built-in magnet for cart attachment. Either one will give you a yardage reading on a par-3 and get out of your way. That's the baseline here — two budget-tier rangefinders that do the job without requiring you to spend $400.
Where They Differ
Accuracy and Range
This is the clearest gap between them. The PF260 Tour is rated at ±0.4 yards and covers up to 1,100 yards. The KLYR is rated at ±1 yard, and TecTecTec doesn't publish a maximum range at all.
For most amateur rounds, ±1 yard is fine. You're not a machine and neither is your swing. But ±0.4 yards is meaningfully tighter, and when you're trying to dial in whether it's a hard 9-iron or a smooth 8 into a tucked pin, that margin matters more than people admit. The missing range spec on the KLYR isn't a dealbreaker, but it's information the company chose not to publish, which tells you something — probably because it doesn't compete favorably against units that do publish it.
Battery and Charging
The PF260 Tour runs on a removable rechargeable battery — you get 2-3 rounds per charge, and when the battery eventually dies after a few years, you can swap it out rather than toss the unit. The KLYR uses a CR2 lithium battery.
Here's the thing about CR2: they're at every pharmacy in the country, which means no dead rangefinder if you forgot to charge the night before. There's real value in that. But you're also buying batteries indefinitely, and CR2s aren't free. If you play 60-80 rounds a year, that adds up. If you play 20, it probably doesn't.
Size and Extras
The KLYR markets itself as 30% smaller than a standard rangefinder. That's a real design choice, not a rounding error, and if you walk courses and carry everything in your pockets, smaller genuinely matters. It also comes with a belt clip and a ball marker, which are small touches but thoughtful ones.
The PF260 Tour doesn't publish dimensions or weight, so there's no direct size comparison on paper. What it does offer is IP54 water resistance — a tested rating for dust and splash protection. The KLYR is described as water-resistant but that refers to the case it ships with, not the unit itself. That's a real difference if you tee off in the Pacific Northwest or play through an October drizzle without thinking twice about it.
Warranty
Five years versus two. The PF260 Tour's warranty is meaningfully longer, and at this price point, that matters. Budget-tier rangefinders don't always age gracefully, and two years goes fast if you bought one in spring and forgot about the purchase date.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour if:
- You want the best actual rangefinder performance at this price — the accuracy gap is real and it's in the PF260's favor
- You play enough rounds that charging beats buying batteries (roughly 30+ rounds a year and the math starts shifting)
- You're the person who leaves gear in the car overnight in October rain and needs a tested water resistance rating, not a water-resistant case
- A 5-year warranty matters to you — you'd rather set it and forget it than have to re-evaluate a purchase in 18 months
Get the TecTecTec KLYR if:
- You walk and carry, and "fits in my front pocket without printing" is a legitimate requirement, not a preference
- You play intermittently — maybe 15-20 rounds a year — and a CR2 battery feels more practical than maintaining a charging routine
- You're buying this as a gift for someone who will definitely lose the charging cable within the first month
- The ball marker and belt clip genuinely appeal to how you play; some people use that stuff every round
The Bottom Line
Thirty dollars separates these, and the more expensive one is actually the weaker performer. The KLYR costs more because of its size and convenience angle, not because it's a better rangefinder. If you're picking on merit — accuracy, water resistance, warranty, range — the PF260 Tour wins that comparison without much debate.
The KLYR earns its place for the specific golfer who actually needs a smaller unit and likes the CR2 simplicity. But that's a narrower use case than TecTecTec's marketing suggests.
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour.