Compound Bow Comparator
| Compared bows | |||||
| Version | 2025 Mathews Lift X 33 | 2023 Bowtech SR350 | 2022 Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 | ||
| Image Note: images may not represent the selected versions: only 1 image per model is currently stored in our database. | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
| Specifications (selected versions) | |||||
| 2025 Mathews Lift X 33 | 2023 Bowtech SR350 | 2022 Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 | |||
| Brace Height | 6.5 " | 6 " | 6.375 " | ||
| AtA Length | 33 " | 33 " | 33 " | ||
| Draw Length | 26 " - 31.5 " | 25 " - 30 " | 26 " - 31 " | ||
| Draw Weight | 45 lbs - 80 lbs | 40 lbs - 70 lbs | 40 lbs - 80 lbs | ||
| IBO Speed | 343 fps | 350 fps | 334 fps | ||
| Weight | 4.26 lbs | 4.4 lbs | 4.67 lbs | ||
| Let-Off | 80% or 85% | 85 / 87% | 80% or 85% | ||
| Editor reviews | |||||
| Mathews Lift X 33 | Bowtech SR350 | Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 | |||
| Summary Summary review written by our editors. | The Mathews Lift X 33 is a $1,469 aluminum hunting flagship whose real selling point is not on the spec sheet - it is the Allen key that lets you tune the bow yourself. Limb Shift Technology moves paper tuning out of the pro shop and onto your tailgate, and the reworked ARC7 limbs put the 2024 Lift's durability question to rest. On the numbers it is up to 343 fps IBO and a genuinely light 4.26 lbs for a 33-inch frame, delivering high-270s to near-300 fps with real hunting arrows. What I keep coming back to is the shot: a firm back wall, a dead-quiet release with no hand shock, and a long riser that holds the pin still - a package that makes a patient shooter more accurate. The short valley and the personal-fit grip are the only things to try before you buy, and both are easy to work around. An excellent bow for the whitetail-and-western hunter who wants one quiet, forgiving, endlessly tunable rig to carry across seasons and even onto a 3D range. Buyers who want more speed for less money should also look at the Bowtech SR350, and those chasing the most compact, maneuverable version of this exact technology should consider the shorter Lift X 29.5. Read full review... | At a $1,299 launch MSRP, the Bowtech SR350 is a flagship-tier hunting bow that delivers genuine 350-class speed without the punishing draw that usually comes with it - 342 fps with a light arrow in Performance, 300 fps with a real hunting shaft, and a dead-in-hand 96.9 dB shot that belies the velocity. Its two best tricks are the FlipDisc, which turns one bow into a smooth 85% hunter or a faster speed rig with a flip of a module, and DeadLock, which lets you tune the cams square with an Allen key at your own bench. In my experience the combination is what makes it stick: a fast bow you can actually live with and actually tune yourself is rarer than the spec sheet suggests. The narrow Clutch grip and the late Performance-mode hump are real characteristics to know going in, but both have easy answers - feel the grip first, and shoot Comfort mode or back the weight down if you want all-day ease. It is an excellent bow for the do-it-yourself hunter who wants top-end speed and a forgiving 33-inch platform in the same package, and it is particularly strong for the shorter-draw shooter that most speed bows leave out. Buyers who would trade a few fps for a more forgiving brace height should also look at the PSE EVO NXT 33, and those who prioritize the quietest possible shot should consider the Mathews V3X 33. Read full review... | The Hoyt Ventum Pro 33, launched at $1,349 for 2022, is the aim-first aluminum hunter - the long, forgiving member of the Ventum Pro platform for shooters who want a dead-steady hold without paying for carbon. Built on the same HBX Pro binary cam, In-Line accessory system, and VitalPoint grip as the carbon REDWRX Carbon RX-7 Ultra, it stretches the platform onto a 33-inch frame with a taller 6 3/8-inch brace, and gives up only carbon's warmth and a third of a pound for several hundred dollars of saving. Its draw cycle is the highlight: owners shooting Hoyt's whole 2022 range rank it with the RX-7 Ultra's class-best draw, building and rolling over with no hump, and the 334 fps IBO lands at a real 296 fps with a hunting arrow at 71 pounds - flat enough for the longer shots this bow is built to take. The long axle-to-axle holds the pin rock-steady, especially once a stabilizer bar is on it, and the VitalPoint grip is the rare factory grip owners keep, gripping even in heat and humidity. The honest trade-offs are small and fixable - a touch of back-wall softness and imperfect bare-bow balance that a stabilizer and 80% let-off resolve, and an aluminum riser that chills faster than carbon on a late sit. Set up with a stabilizer the way it is meant to be shot, it gave me the steady, unhurried hold that is the whole reason to reach for a long bow. An excellent bow for the long-draw archer and the open-country hunter who values a steady aim and a silky draw over the last few feet per second. Buyers who want more speed and lock-in tuning should also look at the Bowtech SR350, while those who prize maximum forgiveness and the longest draw range for less should consider the PSE EVO NXT 33. Read full review... | ||
| Mathews Lift X 33 | Bowtech SR350 | Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 | |||
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| Mathews Lift X 33 | Bowtech SR350 | Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 | |||
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| User reviews & ratings | |||||
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Aggregate rating Total aggregate rating for all versions | Mathews Lift X 33 (total rating for all versions) | Bowtech SR350 (total rating for all versions) | Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 (total rating for all versions) | ||
model not rated yet | model not rated yet | model not rated yet | |||
| Price comparisons | |||||
| Mathews Lift X 33 | Bowtech SR350 | Hoyt Ventum Pro 33 | |||
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