Hoyt Helix Turbo Specifications

Below are the specs for the Hoyt Helix Turbo compound bow.
2 versions (2021-2020), specs were not changed
all versions (2021 - 2020)
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: 2021 | |||||||
| 2021 | 5.875 " | 31 " | 26-30 " | 30-70 lbs | 350 fps | 4.4 lbs | 80% - 85% |
| Version: 2020 | |||||||
| 2020 | 5.875 " | 31 " | 26-30 " | 30-70 lbs | 350 fps | 4.4 lbs | 80% - 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
- Draws smoother than older turbo cams - the ZT Turbo Pro rolls back without the brutal hump shooters expect from a 350 fps bow
- X-Act grip is thin, narrow and flat-backed - one of the most comfortable hand positions in the 2020 Hoyt lineup
- Quiet and dead in the hand for a speed bow, with little post-shot vibration thanks to Limb Shox and Shock Pods
- Real-world speed lands right at the 350 IBO claim - low-to-mid 340s fps at 30 inch and 70 lb with a light arrow
- Aluminum TEC riser keeps the platform tough and around $500 cheaper than the carbon RX-4 Turbo on the same speed chassis
- Short, tight valley means the bow wants to creep forward if you relax at full draw - nailing your exact draw length keeps it forgiving
- A more engaged draw than the standard RX cams, so shooters with shoulder issues may want to shoot one in person first