Hoyt HyperEdge Specifications

Below are the specs for the Hoyt HyperEdge compound bow.
2 versions (2017-2016), specs were not changed
all versions (2017 - 2016)
specific version
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: 2017 | |||||||
| 2017 | 7 " | 36 " | 25.5-31.5 " | 30-70 lbs | 325 fps | 4.5 lbs | 80% |
| Version: 2016 | |||||||
| 2016 | 7 " | 36 " | 25.5-31.5 " | 30-70 lbs | 325 fps | 4.5 lbs | 80% |
| BH | Brace height |
| AtA | Axle-to-Axle length |
| DL | Draw length |
| DW | Draw weight |
| IBO | IBO speed |
| Wght | Mass weight |
| LO | Let-off |
What do you want to do next?
Check Out Pros & Cons
Pros
Pros
- Aims like a full 40-inch target bow despite a compact 36-inch axle-to-axle - steady on the spot even without stabilizers
- Rock-solid back wall from the DFX cam's dual cable stops, with an optional limb stop for zero give
- Smooth draw with a clean, defined valley and a low-torque modular grip that centers the hand
- Shot goes dead in the hand - very low residual vibration once it is set up right
- Feel is tunable: mods take it from a forgiving high let-off to a tight 65% valley, so one bow suits both hold styles
- A 36-inch tournament rig that rewards developed form - first-time archers are better served by a friendlier entry target bow
- Some owners note faint post-shot buzz when the draw-stop-to-string gap is left open - closing that gap in setup quiets it