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
Version2007 Mathews Classic2008 Bowtech Tomkat2007 Hoyt Trykon
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Mathews ClassicBowtech TomkatHoyt Trykon
Specifications
(selected versions)
2007 Mathews Classic2008 Bowtech Tomkat2007 Hoyt Trykon
Brace Height7 "8.5 "7 "
AtA Length36 "31.75 "33 "
Draw Length27 " - 31 "27 " - 31 "25 " - 31 "
Draw Weight40 lbs - 70 lbs40 lbs - 70 lbs40 lbs - 80 lbs
IBO Speed310 fps - 312 fps299 fps - 315 fps316 fps
Weight3.6 lbs3.8 lbs lbs
Let-Off80%/65% 65% - 80% 65% or 80%
Editor reviews
Mathews ClassicBowtech TomkatHoyt Trykon
Summary
Summary review written by our editors.

The Mathews Classic is the forgiving, low-maintenance single-cam hunter of the mid-2000s Mathews line, and time has been kind to what it set out to do. Launched at $589 MSRP and built unchanged from 2004 through 2007, it pairs a long 36-inch axle-to-axle and a tall 7-inch brace with a 3.6-pound carry weight and a MaxCam that rates 310 fps IBO - moderate speed traded, on purpose, for a bow that holds still and stays in tune. Its two quieting technologies, Harmonic Dampers and String Suppressors, and its comfortable wood grip round out a shot that is calm and undemanding. What I keep coming back to with a bow like this is how little it asks of you: no cam timing to chase, no twitchy short-brace behavior to fight, just a steady pin and a quiet shot. It is an excellent choice for the whitetail hunter who walks in far and sits long, and for the developing archer who wants a forgiving platform to build form on, particularly strong as a dependable, tune-and-forget treestand rig. Buyers prioritizing a more compact, higher-brace package should also look at the Bowtech Tomkat, and those wanting more speed and a wider adjustment range should also look at the Hoyt Trykon. Read full review...

No editors' review yet.
Please see user reviews below.

The Hoyt Trykon was Hoyt's mid-2000s flagship-tier hunting bow - the model that modernized the line around the hybrid Zephyr Cam & 1/2 - and today it is one of the best-reasoned used buys on the market for a hunter who wants real Hoyt engineering without a new-bow budget. The core numbers hold up: a 316 fps IBO from the Zephyr cam, a forgiving 33 inch axle-to-axle and 7 inch brace, XT500 limbs on a machined riser, a wide 40-80 lb and 25-31 inch fit range, and buyer-selectable 65% or 80% let-off. Real-world speed lands where the setup dictates - a tuned example chronographed 297 fps with a 338 grain arrow at a modest 65 lb, 28.5 inch setup - and the accuracy is treestand-lethal out to 40 yards with nothing exotic bolted on. Hoyt never published a mass weight or a launch price for the Trykon, and the honest characterization is a bow that runs heavier and livelier at the shot than a modern rig - both of which an experienced owner turns to advantage, the mass for a steadier hold and the liveliness dispatched by a low-cost string and damping kit. In my experience the Trykon converts skeptics the moment they shoot a tuned one: the Zephyr draw is the whole appeal, and it still holds up. This is an excellent bow for the value-minded whitetail hunter who wants a stable, forgiving, genuinely fast used chassis and does not mind a tune and a damping kit to bring it current, particularly strong from a treestand where its mass and geometry pay off. Buyers who rank absolute silence and single-cam simplicity first should also look at the Mathews Switchback, and those chasing the most raw speed of the era should weigh the Bowtech Allegiance. Read full review...

Mathews ClassicBowtech TomkatHoyt Trykon
Pros
  • Single-cam SoloCam design (MaxCam) with no dual-cam timing to synchronize - simpler to tune and consistent shot to shot over the long haul
  • Light 3.6-lb mass on a full 36-inch frame that carries easily through all-day hunts and long treestand sits
  • Forgiving to hold - the tall 7-inch brace paired with the long 36-inch axle-to-axle steadies the pin for shooters still grooving their form
  • Built around two quieting technologies, Harmonic Dampers and String Suppressors, aimed squarely at a calm, low-noise shot
    • The hybrid Zephyr Cam & 1/2 draws with a rounded, forgiving pull that made the Trykon Hoyt's smooth-but-fast hunting choice of the mid-2000s
    • Buyer-selectable 65% or 80% let-off by module lets a shooter set the hold to match either speed-tuned or long-stand-comfort priorities
    • Machined riser and XT500 limbs give the platform a stiff, durable chassis that owners still hunt hard with 15-plus years on
    • Wide 25-31 inch draw and 40-80 lb range make one used chassis fit almost any adult hunter without a proprietary module hunt
    • Responds strongly to a modern string set and a damping kit - a low-cost path to a quiet, dead-in-hand shot on a used bow
    Mathews ClassicBowtech TomkatHoyt Trykon
    Cons
    • The MaxCam sets draw length by cam/module rather than a rotating on-the-fly module - a shooter who changes draw length often should confirm their exact length up front, since a change means a cam or module swap
    • As a 2004-2007 model it is a used-market buy today - worth a fresh set of strings and cables and a quick pro-shop once-over before hunting it
      • Runs heavier in the hand than a modern hunting bow - many owners actually prefer that mass for a steadier hold on aim, but shooters counting ounces for long mobile hunts may want to weigh it in person first
      • Stock 2006-07 damping is dated - an aftermarket string-silencer and limb-dampener kit takes the vibration and noise out and is the first upgrade most owners make
      • Draw-length changes are a bow-press job on the Z-module string set, not a tool-free rotating module - dial in your exact draw at a shop before the season
      User reviews & ratings
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      Total aggregate rating for all versions
      Mathews Classic
      (total rating for all versions)
      Bowtech Tomkat
      (total rating for all versions)
      Hoyt Trykon
      (total rating for all versions)
      model not rated yet

        out of 11 reviews
        • Smooth, Fast, and Accurate!
          by Ryan from Findlay, OH
        • Great bow for someone looking to get into archery or for a seasoned shooter looking for a nice bow!
          by Brandon Oliver from Vincennes, Indiana
        • It was a good bow that with the choice of smooth mods and speed mods gave a shooter nice options.
          by Chris Holman from Silver City, New Mexico
        • Great bow for the price point.
          by William G. Lamb, Jr, from Goose Creek, SC
        • Read all user reviews

        out of 4 reviews
        • Better than most new bows!!!
          by Branden Farmer from Opelika, AL
        • Will probably never buy another bow see no reason for it
          by Daniel Travis Shaw from tompkinsville, Kentucky, USA
        • Truly impressed with the versatility and how quiet it is along with how well is made.
          by Eddie Nieto from Orange City, Florida 32763
        • Great bow
          by Shawn yarber from Oklahoma
        • Read all user reviews
        Price comparisons
        Mathews ClassicBowtech TomkatHoyt Trykon
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