PSE Sicario 35 Specifications

Below are the specs for the PSE Sicario 35 compound bow.
Version: 2026
| Version | Brace height | Ata length | Draw length | Draw weight | IBO speed | Mass weight | Let-off |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BH | AtA | DL | DW | IBO | Wght | LO | |
| Version: 2026 | |||||||
| 2026 | 5.875 " | 35 " | 26-31.5 " | 40-80 lbs | 336 fps | 3.9 lbs | 75% - 85% |
| BH | Brace height |
| AtA | Axle-to-Axle length |
| DL | Draw length |
| DW | Draw weight |
| IBO | IBO speed |
| Wght | Mass weight |
| LO | Let-off |
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Check Out Pros & Cons
Pros
Pros
- Substantially smoother and less aggressive on the draw than the 33-inch Sicario - the longer riser and FDS cam pull with no mid-draw hump and an easy let-down
- Still genuinely fast - real-world chronograph readings of 285-286 fps with a 435-grain arrow at 70 lb, only about 18-20 fps behind its short-brace sibling
- Same 3.9-pound Dead Frequency Carbon chassis - a 35-inch hunting rig this light is rare, and it carries and holds all day without fatigue
- The 35-inch axle-to-axle and 5.875-inch brace give a flatter string angle and a more forgiving hold, with less arm-slap risk under bulky cold-weather clothing
- Quiet, low-feedback shot for a carbon bow - owners describe it as dead in the hand with little post-shot buzz
- Some owners note a slight post-shot jump - the bow wants to kick out of the hand a touch - which a modest front stabilizer settles for steady aim
- Fine cam-lean tuning relies on the EZ.220 snap-spacer kit (about $100, sold separately) and a bow press - only relevant if you tune your own gear