What They Have in Common
Both are $199 (essentially), both shoot to ±1 yard accuracy, both have 6x magnification, and both have slope with a legal-play switch. That's the baseline you'd expect at this tier. Neither is going to embarrass you on course. The buying decision comes down to everything else.
Where They Differ
Battery and Charging
This is the biggest fork in the road. The KLYR runs on a CR2 lithium battery. The Laser Fit has a built-in USB-C rechargeable lithium-polymer battery rated for about 8 hours or 40-plus rounds per charge.
Here's the honest trade-off: CR2 batteries are at every pharmacy and most gas stations, which matters when you've forgotten to charge something before a Saturday morning tee time. The Laser Fit's rechargeable setup is cleaner day-to-day — plug it in once a week and forget it — but if you let it die on a Wednesday and don't notice until the first tee on Friday, you're scrambling. Call it a hunch that most golfers who buy the Laser Fit will eventually have that moment at least once.
Neither approach is wrong. But they reflect genuinely different habits, and you probably already know which kind of person you are.
Weight and Size
The Laser Fit weighs 4 ounces. That's not a spec-sheet flex — that's genuinely light. For context, 4 ounces is lighter than most smartphones without a case. The KLYR is listed as under 1.5 pounds, which is a very wide spec window and tells you roughly nothing precise. Both are marketed as pocket-size, but the Laser Fit publishes its dimensions (3.39 × 1.48 × 2.21 inches) and the KLYR doesn't, so you can't do a direct comparison on paper. Safe to say both are compact; the Laser Fit is almost certainly lighter.
Pin-Finding Tech
The Laser Fit brings a few features the KLYR doesn't have: ball-to-pin triangulation, a pin tracer mode, a spot measure mode, and a 0.1-second measurement claim via what Voice Caddie calls their V-Algorithm. The dual-color LED display (red for normal, black for slope-adjusted distances) is also a nice touch for at-a-glance readability.
The KLYR's display is a standard LCD. Nothing wrong with it — LCD is what most rangefinders in this category use — but it doesn't do anything particularly clever.
Whether the Laser Fit's triangulation tech meaningfully helps you on course is hard to say without using it. Seems like it's most useful on tight lies where a flagstick is partially obscured, but I don't have hands-on time with this one to confirm that.
Extras: Magnet, Clip, Ball Marker
The KLYR comes with a built-in magnet, a belt clip, and a ball marker. That's a legitimately useful bundle. The magnet sticks to your cart rail, the clip keeps it accessible during a walk, and the ball marker is just one less thing to dig out of your pocket. The Laser Fit doesn't list any of these. If cart-mount convenience matters to you, the KLYR has a real edge here.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the TecTecTec KLYR if:
- You're the golfer who keeps a spare CR2 in your bag alongside the extra tees — you like knowing you'll never be stuck.
- You primarily ride a cart and want a rangefinder that magnets to the rail without an extra accessory.
- You want a no-fuss package: clip it on, shoot, go.
- You don't want to think about a charging routine for your rangefinder.
Get the Voice Caddie Laser Fit if:
- You carry your bag and every ounce matters — 4 ounces is legitimately different from what most rangefinders feel like in a shirt pocket after 18 holes.
- You're the type who charges your watch, earbuds, and GPS every Sunday night anyway; adding one more cable to the routine is nothing.
- You want the pin-finding and triangulation tech and are willing to learn what it actually does for your game.
- You play a lot of rounds and want a built-in battery that won't need replacing mid-season.
The Bottom Line
At a $0.99 price gap, this is purely a lifestyle call. The KLYR is the more complete out-of-box package — magnet, clip, marker, CR2 simplicity. The Laser Fit is the more technically interesting rangefinder, with real weight advantages and smarter pin-finding features.
If I had to pick one for most golfers, I'd go with the Laser Fit. The 4-ounce weight is legitimately noticeable over a full round, the USB-C charging is convenient enough for most people, and the pin-finding tech gives it a ceiling the KLYR doesn't have. But if you're a cart golfer who hates charging things, the KLYR's magnet-and-battery setup is hard to argue with.
Get the Voice Caddie Laser Fit.
See Also