Hoyt Alpha AX-90 Specifications

Below are the specs for the Hoyt Alpha AX-90 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 | 6.5 " | 32.5625 " | 26-31 " | 80-90 lbs | 347 fps | 4.75 lbs | 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
- Reaches a true 90-pound peak for maximum kinetic energy, backed by reinforced steel limb hardware built to pass Hoyt's 1,500 dry-fire test at full weight
- A heavy 465-grain arrow clocked 316 fps in hands-on testing, roughly 103 ft-lb of kinetic energy for deep penetration on the biggest game
- Even at 90 pounds the draw never dumps harshly, rolling clean over the peak into a solid back wall and a usable valley
- Dead, silent shot with zero post-shot vibration and a rock-solid hold, the Hoyt shot signature carried intact to extreme poundage
- Gives up nothing on features, with the full press-free XTS tuning system and In-Line accessory integration from the Alpha AX-3
- The draw stacks hard from the first inch and tires you quickly, so it is no cold-weather or all-day-3D bow; warm up and shoot one in person before committing
- At a 90-pound peak the spine requirements turn very stiff and arrow choices narrow, so factor in a heavy stiff-spine build and a pro-shop spine check