What They Have in Common
Both are 6x magnification rangefinders with slope mode and a slope switch for tournament play. Both sit in the same price tier and handle the basics — flag acquisition, vibration confirmation, water resistance. Neither is trying to be a GPS watch or connect to anything. They're rangefinders. Point, shoot, get your number.
Where They Differ
Accuracy
This is the one that should drive your decision. The PF260 Tour is rated at ±0.4 yards; the L6 is rated at ±1 yard. In practice, both will give you a number that's close enough to pull the right club — but the difference matters most on tight approaches where you're splitting 148 from 150. Probably because Mileseey is leaning hard on spec-sheet credibility to compete against more established names, that ±0.4 claim is front and center in their positioning. I'd take it seriously. It's meaningfully tighter on paper, and for this tier, that's not nothing.
Display
The L6 wins here without much argument. OLED displays are genuinely easier to read in variable light — they produce their own light per pixel rather than relying on a backlight, so contrast is sharper. The PF260 Tour uses a transmissive LCD, which works fine but can wash out in bright conditions. Nobody reads a rangefinder in direct sunlight anyway; you're usually shading the eyepiece with your hand — but the L6 makes that easier. If you're playing early morning rounds or late evening light, the OLED advantage is real.
Battery and Charging
The Mileseey PF260 Tour has a removable rechargeable battery, which matters more than it sounds. If you're mid-round and your rangefinder dies, a removable battery means you can swap in a spare. The L6's battery specs aren't published, so it's hard to compare on life or type — but the PF260's 2-3 rounds per charge is at least something concrete to plan around. Call it a hunch, but the absence of battery info on the L6's spec sheet is the kind of thing that makes you appreciate knowing exactly what you're working with on the other one.
Range and Extras
The PF260 Tour has a 100-yard range advantage on paper (1,100 vs. 1,000), though honestly neither of you is shooting at something 1,000 yards away. More practically: the L6 comes with Pin Tracer technology and a rapid-fire scan mode, which can help when you're trying to isolate a flag with trees or hazards behind it. The PF260 has vibration lock confirmation. Both do slope with a legal-play switch. The PF260 also has a 5-year warranty, which for a budget-tier rangefinder is a genuinely good backstop.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour if:
- Accuracy is your deciding factor. The ±0.4 yard rating is the best number in this tier, and if you're the type who agonizes over 147 versus 149, that matters.
- You want the peace of mind of a removable battery. If you play a lot and don't want to think about charging mid-week, being able to swap a spare is genuinely useful.
- You're a 12-handicap who plays twice a week and wants a rangefinder that'll last five years without drama. The warranty has your back.
- You play in tournaments where slope-off is required and want something that makes that toggle obvious and reliable.
Get the Voice Caddie L6 if:
- Display quality matters to you. The OLED is legitimately better and you'll notice it, especially in the low-light hours most avid golfers actually play in.
- You're a 20-handicap who just wants to know if it's 140 or 160. For that use case, ±1 yard is plenty precise and the L6's scan mode makes targeting easier.
- You tend to play courses with a lot of layered backdrops where isolating the flag is genuinely tricky — the Pin Tracer helps there.
- You've handled both and the L6 just feels better in your hand. At this price, feel matters.
The Bottom Line
These are both honest, no-frills rangefinders that do the job. But the PF260 Tour's accuracy advantage is real, the warranty is better, and the removable battery is a practical plus that the L6 can't match. The L6 counters with a genuinely superior display and flag-isolation tools. If I had to pick one — and I do — I'd take the Mileseey. The accuracy number is harder to ignore than the display upgrade, and the $30 savings doesn't hurt.
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour.