Bonus Savings
Apply your 5% off code before May 31:
Guide TN650M Muo 2.0 Thermal & 4K Night Vision Binocular with 1,500m LRF
Guide TN650M Muo 2.0 Thermal & 4K Night Vision Binocular with 1,500m LRF is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
We offer free US standard shipping on orders over $99 and 30-day returns on most items. Some limitations apply.
Shipping Policy
30-Day Return Policy
The Guide TN650M Muo 2.0 fuses a 640 × 512 12μm thermal sensor with a 4K (3840 × 2160) low-light night vision sensor in a single binocular chassis — twin imaging cores at $4,499. Where the Pulsar Merger Duo NXP50 retails near $7,500 and dedicated dual-sensor binoculars from iRay's Geni HYR series push past $6,000, the TN650M brings true multi-spectral imaging into a price tier where most competitors offer thermal-only optics. Built on the same TN MUO 2.0 platform as the TN650L (1,500m LRF, 7-hour hot-swap battery, 128 GB recording, compass + gyroscope), the Muo adds a second imaging path for full-color identification when ambient light allows.
Key Features
- Dual-sensor architecture — primary 640 × 512 12μm thermal core for detection, secondary 4K (3840 × 2160) low-light CMOS for identification with shape, color, and detail under available light
- 640 × 512 thermal at 18mK NETD, 50 Hz refresh — full-resolution VOx detector with sharper hot-target edges than 384-class binoculars
- 3,840 × 2,160 (4K) night vision sensor with 70mm F1.8 lens — a separate optical and sensor path optimized for low ambient light; resolves visual detail thermal can't see
- 50mm F1.0 thermal objective with 3.9x–31.2x continuous zoom — base magnification for scanning, extended zoom for distant ID work
- Integrated 1,500m / 1,630yd laser rangefinder + compass + gyroscope — distance, heading, and inclination data on the eyepiece for shooting solutions
- 0.49" 1920 × 1080 AMOLED display, 20mm eye relief — full-HD imaging from either sensor
- 2,800-yard thermal man-target detection — long-range standoff for predator and big-game observation
- 7-hour runtime on internal cell + replaceable 18650 — hot-swap covers a full night without battery juggling
- 128 GB internal storage with audio recording — capture both thermal and NV footage for review and training
- WiFi (2.4G + 5G) + Bluetooth — companion connectivity for app integration and file transfer
- IP67 weather sealing — rain, dew, and dust ingress rated
- 58–72 mm interpupillary distance, ±6 diopter adjustment — fits virtually all adult face sizes; per-eye diopter compensates for prescription
- Slim binocular housing — TN MUO 2.0 platform is ~20% lighter than the previous generation; 711 g with one-handed silent focus knob
How It Compares
- vs Pulsar Merger Duo NXP50 (~$7,500–$8,000): the closest direct analog — thermal + digital NV in one binocular. The TN650M undercuts by $3,000+ with comparable thermal core (640-class) and integrated LRF. Pulsar wins on Stream Vision app maturity; the TN650M wins on price.
- vs iRayUSA Geni HYR series (~$6,000–$10,000): premium-tier multi-spectral binoculars from a US-distributed brand. The TN650M brings the same dual-sensor concept down by ~$1,500–$5,500.
- vs ATN BinoX 4K Smart HD (~$700–$900): not a real comparison — the ATN is a 4K day/night binocular without thermal. Useful only as a baseline for what isn't a true multi-spectral optic at the budget tier.
- vs Guide TN650L (~$3,799, also in our store): same chassis, same LRF, same battery, same recording — the Muo adds the secondary 4K low-light sensor and the optical path needed to drive it. The decision is whether the multi-spectral capability justifies the $700 step up.
When the Second Sensor Matters
Thermal alone tells you something is there and how warm it is. It rarely tells you what species without context — a hog and a deer present similar heat signatures at distance. Adding a 4K low-light sensor restores shape, color, and texture information when ambient light allows (moonlight, late dusk, near-camp lighting). For livestock guards working with mixed wildlife, hunters who need positive ID before committing to a shot, or anyone observing in environments where thermal alone is ambiguous, the second sensor is the gating capability — not a nice-to-have.
Ideal For
- Hunters who require positive species identification before shooting — predator hunters in pasture-adjacent terrain, depredation permit holders, hog hunters in mixed-wildlife environments
- Livestock guards and ranch professionals monitoring herds and predator pressure — thermal flags activity, the 4K NV sensor confirms whether it's a coyote or a stray dog
- Big-game outfitters running pre-dawn scouting and post-dusk recovery — both imaging paths cover the full ambient-light window without swapping devices
- Buyers stepping up from thermal-only binoculars — the multi-spectral capability is the meaningful upgrade once thermal-only ambiguity becomes a recurring field issue
Accessories & Compatibility
- Ships with eye mask, neck strap, soft carry bag, 18650 battery + charger, USB cable, USB adapter, quick start guide, and warranty card
- WiFi connection supports companion app pairing for media transfer
- 10-year manufacturer warranty backed by Guide's US-based repair center in Texas
-
Objective Lens Diameter
-
Lens System
-
Minimum Magnification
-
Maximum Magnification
-
Field of View
-
Thermal Sensor
-
Display
-
Display Resolution
-
Sensor Type
-
NETD
-
LRF Distance
-
Detection Distance
-
Eye Relief
-
Water Resistance Level
-
Refresh Rate
-
Battery Life
-
Storage
-
Dimensions
-
Weight
-
Warranty
Payment & Security
Payment methods
Your payment information is processed securely encrypted during transmission. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
Questions & Answers
Have a Question?
Be the first to ask a question about this.




