Hoyt Trykon Jr Specifications

Hoyt Trykon Jr

Below are the specs for the Hoyt Trykon Jr compound bow. This compound bow was modified by the Hoyt design team over years. Scroll down to find Hoyt Trykon Jr specs for all modifications.

4 versions (2010-2007), specs were changed
all versions (2010 - 2007)
specific version
Version Brace
height
Ata
length
Draw
length
Draw
weight
IBO
speed
Mass
weight
Let-off
BH AtA DL DW IBO Wght LO
Version: 2010
2010 6.5 " 29.5 " 17-25 " 10-40 lbs 255 fps 2.7 lbs 65%
Version: 2009
2009 6.5 " 29.5 " 17-25 " 10-40 lbs 255 fps 2.7 lbs 65%
Version: 2008
2008 6.5 " 29.5 " 17-25 " 20-40 lbs 255 fps 2.7 lbs 65%
Version: 2007
2007 6.5 " 29.5 " 17-25 " 20-40 lbs 255 fps 2.7 lbs 65%
BHBrace height
AtAAxle-to-Axle length
DLDraw length
DWDraw weight
IBOIBO speed
WghtMass weight
LOLet-off

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Check Out Pros & Cons
Pros
  • One cam covers 17 to 25 inches of draw in inch steps, so the same bow follows a child through years of growth instead of being outgrown in a season
  • Machined-aluminum Hoyt riser and dedicated youth limbs - a real Hoyt build at 2.7 pounds, not a plastic toy-grade youth bow
  • 65% let-off keeps the holding weight low enough that a small archer can settle and aim rather than fight the bow
  • A documented upgrade path - Hoyt built the Jr to trade up to the Trykon Sport once a kid grows past its 40-pound ceiling
  • Light and short at roughly 30 inches axle-to-axle, easy for small hands and arms to hold up and steer
Cons
  • Draw-weight floor was 20 pounds in 2007 and 2008, which is stout for a very young beginner - buyers of a first bow for a small child should hunt down a 2009 or 2010 unit, whose cam family drops the floor to 10 pounds
  • As a discontinued 2007-2010 model it is a used-market buy today - worth a quick string and cam-module check before handing it to a kid, since fresh strings and the right module are inexpensive