Compound Bow Comparator

This unique bow comparison tool is capable of comparing bows at the version level. You can choose up to 10 compound bows to compare reviews, ratings, specs, pictures, and prices. Click the 'Add one more' button to add a new bow to your list. Alternatively, if you want to exclude a particular bow, click the 'remove' link. Once you are ready to compare, click the 'Compare' button.
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Compared bows
Version2024 Hoyt Concept X 372023 Mathews TRX 362018 Elite Echelon 37
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Hoyt Concept X 37Mathews TRX 36Elite Echelon 37
Specifications
(selected versions)
2024 Hoyt Concept X 372023 Mathews TRX 362018 Elite Echelon 37
Brace Height7 "6.5 "6.75 "
AtA Length37 "36 "37.125 "
Draw Length25 " - 31 "24 " - 30.5 "26.5 " - 31 "
Draw Weight30 lbs - 70 lbs40 lbs - 70 lbs40 lbs - 70 lbs
IBO Speed330 fps330 fps - 334 fps298 fps - 343 fps
Weight4.75 lbs4.66 lbs4.6 lbs
Let-Off65/70/75% 70% & 80% 75% - 90%
Editor reviews
Hoyt Concept X 37Mathews TRX 36Elite Echelon 37
Summary
Summary review written by our editors.

The Hoyt Concept X 37 is a ground-up rebuild of Hoyt's target flagship, and it earns the effort. It carries flagship money - around $1,999 with standard limbs, $2,199 with the high-gloss set - and answers with a long, torque-resistant riser, an all-new SCTR cam whose let-off you can tune in 2.5% steps, and TXL limbs that make the bow genuinely hard to twist off-center. Its headline speed of 330 fps is measured by the stricter ATA standard, so it is quicker than the number suggests, and real chronograph work confirms it. In my experience the combination of a wide-limb, hard-to-torque platform and an inch of reflex is what makes this bow so forgiving - it rewards a clean release with a tight group and shoots dead in the hand. It is not a hunting bow and does not try to be. An excellent choice for the spot, field, and 3D competitor who wants a torque-resistant, finely tunable target bow at 37 inches; longer-draw archers should look at the Hoyt Concept X 40, and those who prize the smoothest draw should also consider the Elite Echelon 37. Read full review...

The Mathews TRX 36 is the fast, stable middle of the 2020 TRX target line - a 36-inch bow that pairs a 334 fps IBO speed rating with the smooth, linear C3X draw and the dead-in-hand shot that is the Mathews signature. Launched at $1,849 as a bare bow, it asks the buyer to add a rest, sight, and stabilizers on top, the way any competition rig does. What I keep coming back to is how quiet and planted it feels for a bow this quick - the caged riser and 3D Damping give it a stillness at the shot you expect from a hunting flagship, not a speed-brace target bow. The two-mod let-off lets a shooter pick between an aggressive 70V wall and a relaxed 80% valley, both backing up against a back wall firm enough to feel like limb stops. Real chronograph readings land around 290 fps at 60 pounds with a target arrow and climb past 300 with lighter shafts or full weight, so there is genuine speed on tap for long 3D and field shots. The Engage grip is the one part most competitive owners swap for flatter side plates, an easy and expected fix. An excellent bow for 3D and field archers who want speed and a rock-steady, quiet shot in one platform, and it is particularly strong as a longer-axle crossover for the archer juggling target seasons and fall hunting. Buyers who want maximum on-the-line stability should also look at the Hoyt Invicta 37 SVX, and those who want more let-off flexibility and a more forgiving brace at the same price should look at the PSE Citation 36. Read full review...

The Echelon 37 is an outstanding target bow with the ability for shooters to tune it exactly how they want. Although it will still have an Elite draw cycle, the ability to adjust the let-off from 75-90%, in addition to choosing which draw stop style to use (limb stop or cable stop) is really outstanding, and something that may open up the customer base a bit for Elite since they have historically only offered a limb stop aided back wall. The feel of the new technology and integrations into the Echelon 37 are great, and this bow is a flat out shooter. For those wanting any extra edge they can get, the ability to fine tune everything about this bow should gives shooters a competitive edge in the target world. The price is expensive, and the black limbs only are kind of a drag. However, winning target archery competitions can help offset the cost of the bow, and black limbs may not matter much when standing at the top of the podium. Shooters have more say than ever before in regards to how the Echelon 37 shoots and feels, and with some much customization, Elite really has made a target bow for everyone based on how they set it up. Read full review...

Hoyt Concept X 37Mathews TRX 36Elite Echelon 37
Pros
  • Wide TXL limb stance makes the bow physically hard to torque left or right, holding the pin steadier through the shot
  • SCTR cam lets you fine-tune let-off in 2.5% steps (65/70/75%, or 67.5/72.5/77.5% with the Tweener mod) to dial holding weight
  • Dead-in-hand, low-vibration shot with a rare mix of target stillness and hunting-bow responsiveness
  • One inch of riser reflex plus a long 37-inch platform make it exceptionally forgiving of a less-than-perfect release
  • Hoyt's target limb coatings and finishes are among the cleanest in the category, and the riser comes in ten colors
  • Quiet, dead-in-hand shot with almost no vibration or grip feedback - the 3D Damping pulled straight from Mathews' hunting flagships
  • Rock-solid, limb-stop-firm back wall from the new C3X cam shape that holds the pin dead-steady on the middle
  • Smooth, linear draw with no hump into the valley - the cam builds to the wall without a speed spike or a dump
  • Caged riser above the grip drops the weight off the top hand, lowering the center of gravity for a planted, stable aim
  • Genuinely quick for a target rig off the 6.5-inch brace, with the quiet signature to double as a longer-axle hunting bow
  • Tons of customization and fine tuning based on preferences
  • 8 color options to choose from
  • New technology including the cam system, cable slide, grip, and riser
  • Customized draw stops for a personalized feel
Hoyt Concept X 37Mathews TRX 36Elite Echelon 37
Cons
  • Hoyt rates speed by the stricter ATA standard, so 330 fps reads slower than a rival's IBO number - compare like-for-like, not the headline
  • Draw-length-specific Spec modules that squeeze out maximum speed are a separate purchase from the 3-inch-range CDM mod it ships with
  • Some owners find the Engage grip a touch round in the back and easy to torque - the flat side-plate option or aftermarket inserts drop straight on for a flatter, more defined hand
  • The 70V mod runs an aggressive, short valley that keeps you pulling hard into the wall - shooters wanting a deeper, relaxed hold should fit the 80% mod
  • MSRP of $1399 is competitive for target archery, but still pricey
  • Draw length maxes at 31-inches, which arguably still fits most shooters
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      Hoyt Concept X 37Mathews TRX 36Elite Echelon 37
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