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Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?

Travis Pike - comments 16 comments
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Cyelee CAT0 Red Dot Sight

Cyelee CAT0 Red Dot Sight

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Cyelee is an up-and-coming red dot company that would be easy to dismiss. It’s one of what I call ‘Amazon’ brands.

Amazon brands are garbage-tier optics companies like Feyachi and Pinty. Cyelee started popping up in odd corners of the firearms world, likely a big marketing push by the brand to get optics out there.

Cyelee contacted me directly and offered to send me the CAT0 micro red dot sight for test and review.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
The CAT0 fits on the Shield RMSc footprint.

While dismissing the company is easy, it might not be wise. Sure, it’s Chinese optics, but that’s the most common red dot. Holosun used to be a very similar company. Holosun and Macho Man both taught me one thing: the cream always rises to the top.

Is Cyelee going to rise to the top of the optics world? Will they have a massive booth at SHOT in a couple of years?

The best way to find out is to take the CAT0 to the range and let the lead fly.

The CAT0 In Living Color

The CAT0 is a micro-sized optic designed for subcompact and micro-compact firearms. It fits the Shield RMSc footprint, which has become the standard for micro-sized guns.

The CAT0 isn’t all that novel or unique. If you look at the various Holosun, CHPWS, and similar sights, the Cyelee wouldn’t stand out all that much.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
With the right cut and sights the CAT0 sits low enough to cowitness (Travis Pike For TTAG)

Until you get to the price, at 149.99, it’s not an expensive optic. The CAT0 is cheaper than the competition and promises competitive features. You get stuff like shake-awake tech. After four minutes of inactivity, the optic goes to sleep, and absolutely any movement will spring it to life.

Cyelee went with a top-loading battery that uses a hex head to remove the cap. (A Hex head wrench is included.) Drop a 1632 battery in the thing, and you’re good to go. The optic brags about 50,000 hours of battery life, but I’d probably cut that number in half when using a brightness level capable of being seen during the day.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
The Cylee brand has expanded rapidly providing more and more affordable optics (Travis Pike For TTAG)

The window is a decent size at .89 x .63 . It’s larger than the Holosun 407K, which tends to be its main competitor. Big windows aren’t a big deal; they tend to be easier to use for new shooters who might have trouble finding the dot. Inside that window, we find our 3 MOA dot, which has eight daytime settings and two for night.

Shooting The CAT0

The CAT0 drops on the gun easily enough. Cyelee includes an absolute ton of different screws. They have different diameters and lengths, so you can find the right combo for your gun.

I really wish the footprint would dictate the screw, but I appreciate Cyelee recognizing that that’s not the case.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
The notch filter is light and the dot is fairly crisp (Travis Pike For TTAG)

I mounted the CAT0 to the CZ Nocturne P09C, which does require a short screw due to the small slide size. The CAT0’s manual brags that it’s prezeored, and only minor adjustments are required. That turned out to be mostly true. I had to adjust the dot slightly up and to the left. If you are the type that shoots low left then this dot would be zeroed for you.

With the zero in place, I shot through a few long strings of fire, trying to observe the optic’s refresh rate. I was looking for a streak of solid red as the gun recoils, and I got it. The dot doesn’t lag and stutter when moving quickly. When shooting rapidly, it’s nothing more than a red streak moving up and slightly to the right as I shoot.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
The dot has a decent refresh rate and forms a streak when moving (Travis Pike For TTAG)

The 3 MOA dot is fairly crisp and nice. The lens has a slight notch filter, but less than I expected—I’d argue less than my Holosuns.

The side buttons provide your brightness controls, and they are rubberized. The buttons sit fairly deep under the rubberized housing. It might feel annoying, but this does make it a lot tougher to accidentally adjust brightness when carrying concealed. When you finally reach the button, it’s nice and tactile.

In the Sun

I like to see how optics perform in varying brightness levels, and the evening sun in Florida works quite well. I assumed the firing position at varying angles. I exposed my backside to it, faced it, let it hit my sides, and essentially assumed every clock position.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
The dot held zero after a couple of drops (Travis Pike For TTAG)

When facing a bright light, or mostly facing it, I had problems seeing. This was not due to the light blinding me—I might be a Jarhead, but I don’t stare at the sun. Instead, the light created reflections in the optic lens that threw red everywhere, making it challenging to find the dot from the draw or even the low ready.

Next, I gave the optic a few falls from chest height to the ground below. I didn’t throw it against concrete or anything crazy, just grass and dirt. After multiple drops at multiple angles, I grabbed the gun and shot a group. The zero remained on point and problem-free.

Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?
Impressive? No, but its a competent enough optic with a low price point (Travis Pike For TTAG)

I hit it with a blast of water to clear the accumulated dirt off and to test the IPX7 rating. Water didn’t seem to do anything I couldn’t wipe away. The Cyelee CAT0 does nothing fancy or fantastic. It’s a basic, bare-bones dot that’s budget-friendly. It’s impressive what a 150-dollar dot can do these days. Five years ago, a 150-dollar pistol dot didn’t exist, and the budget-tier optics certainly wouldn’t work this well.

Specifications:

  • Dot Size – 3 MOA
  • Window Size – .89 x .63
  • Battery – 1632
  • Battery Life – 50K hours
  • Settings – 8 day and 2 night
  • MSRP – 149.99

Overall – *** (and a half)

It’s a very basic red dot and the definition of bare bones. It’s 100% average, which is perfectly fine overall. The price is solid, and the only notable downside is the reflection when faced with bright light. While it doesn’t tick the same boxes as optics like the EPS Carry, it’s a budget contender for those who don’t mind a lack of fancy.

Where To Buy

Cyelee CAT0 Red Dot Sight

16 thoughts on “Is the Cyelee CAT0 Worth $150?”

  1. Dunno about Cyelee but my 2 poverty tier NC Star pistol lights work perfectly. And some slightly better brands that work well🙄

    Reply
  2. I see in the near future handguns being sold sans sights.
    Just like rifles.
    Pity we the buyer do not benefit from the price savings.
    Short barrels, plastic stocks, no iron sights saves the manufacturers scads of money.
    It becomes the norm to buy after market products to make our guns shootable.
    It’s no longer tricking them out its a necessity.

    Reply
  3. I wonder what effect it would have on the market if all the money we send to the PLA went instead to a company like EOTech or Aimpoint.

    The only real difference in these Chinesium optics is how cool the influencer whoring for them is. Even then the final sales determinate will be which one the customer can whittle $10 off with a coupon code.

    I get being broke but if you’re one of these shooters with a drawer full of cheap optics maybe you should make better choices.

    Reply
  4. 3 years ago for the same price I got a Swampfox Liberty green dot with all the same features. Swampfox is an american company, cyelee is as far as I can tell not

    Reply
      • Yes, that is the case for the majority of consumer optics, which is why I said swampfox is an american company, not american made. Kinda like apple is a california company but the phone is made in china. Cyelee is as far as I can tell is not incorporated in america and therefore appears to be chinese owned and made. Sorry dude but your reading comprehension sucks.

        Reply
  5. 3 years ago for the same price I got a Swampfox Liberty green dot with all the same features. Swampfox is an american company, cyelee is as far as I can tell is not

    Reply
  6. I see no benefit in optics on a handgun other then a scope for long range use on specialized handguns.
    And yes I’ve used them.

    Reply
    • Faster, further, straighter, works in all lighting conditions, etc. They’re massively beneficial. Every high level shooter, both competitive and martial recognizes their usefulness

      Reply
    • I just installed a red dot on the Crickett 22 pistol that I’m fixing to use for starlings at the bird feeders. It shoots low with Colibri ammo, and the rear iron sight didn’t have enough adjustment to move POI up to POA. Interesting note, I have astigmatism in both eyes. The right is worse, and trying for precise aiming with both eyes open, or with just the right open, proved frustrating. With just the left eye, it isn’t as bad and given a few seconds I can discern the dot out of the starburst and stack them in the same hole at 32 ft, which is what I need. Eyes open, the starburst is starling sized at that range, so I line it up to just about cover the critter and hit him in the breadbasket.

      One day during a recent snowstorm, they were flocking to the feeders and the wife was fussing, so I brought up the pistol and cracked open the window. Plugged enough for a pie. The wife was tickled pink that I removed that many from the local population, but she put the kibosh on the idea of a blackbird pie. She did make me an apple pie though, so it was a good day.

      Reply
    • they mat not be better than really good sights, but they have some advantages… you don’t have to align anything, great for low light.

      Reply
  7. I quite literally see an advantage.

    I’m at that age where I need progressive lenses. To clearly see the sights on a handgun, when wearing my usual glasses, I have to tip my head way back. Awkward and imprecise.

    A red dot, in contrast, has the eye focusing at infinity (or at the target). So my head stays level and the sight picture in the “sweet spot” of my glasses.

    Unless a bad guy is going to give me a minute to change to my computer or shooting glasses, the dot is simply a better choice for me due to the focusing required vs iron sights.

    Reply
  8. I have four of their Wolf 2-G green dots. The 32/2 reticle perfectly fits a 6″ round target at 25 yards. I have had no failures or disappointments. An aluminum chassis with a top loading battery also make these good units.

    Reply

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