The new bows are out. Time for me to pick an old one

OP
Treeratslayer

Treeratslayer

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 20, 2021
Messages
148
Well, if you are in the market for a year old RX7 Ultra or two or an AX2 33, I’ll be selling them next November.

Guns aren’t the same for me though. I haven’t bought a new one in a long time. But I did recently get a new safe with room for far more than I have. Those empty slots have been bugging me. Gotta resist!

I will keep my eye on that!

And I know that feeling. Can’t be having empty spots! That’s just poor ownership!!lol


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NMJM

FNG
Joined
Aug 2, 2022
Messages
86
Location
New Mexico
At what point does the price and practicality balance out for the “bang for your buck” so to speak?

It depends on what you mean by bang for your buck. None of us will shoot a new bow better than a 10 year old bow. If you want to go from 60 to 70 lbs you will notice a difference in performance. If you want to go from a 2015 bow to a 2025 bow it is unlikely you will see a difference in performance. Advertising and marketing will make us believe but won't change performance.
 
Joined
Oct 28, 2021
Messages
855
At what point does the price and practicality balance out for the “bang for your buck” so to speak? It depends on what you mean by bang for your buck. None of us will shoot a new bow better than a 10 year old bow. If you want to go from 60 to 70 lbs you will notice a difference in performance. If you want to go from a 2015 bow to a 2025 bow it is unlikely you will see a difference in performance. Advertising and marketing will make us believe but won't change performance.
Nothing could be further from the truth. If you believe this, you really gotta go shoot new bows side by side with your ten year old bow.

I can tell you that I have friends who still have bows like the Hoyt Carbon Defiant and the Mathews Vertix. I have done just that and the performance, feel, everything is night and day better.

Even just the jump from the RX8 Ultra and Alpha X 33 I had last year to today's bows of RX9 Ultra and AX-2 32 is completely different. I have gained 18 and 16 feet per second respectively and they are smoother with a much better valley and back wall.

Plus you have full integration, much better balance, and marginally lighter.

Technology is not always a moot point.
 
OP
Treeratslayer

Treeratslayer

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 20, 2021
Messages
148
Nothing could be further from the truth. If you believe this, you really gotta go shoot new bows side by side with your ten year old bow.

I can tell you that I have friends who still have bows like the Hoyt Carbon Defiant and the Mathews Vertix. I have done just that and the performance, feel, everything is night and day better.

Even just the jump from the RX8 Ultra and Alpha X 33 I had last year to today's bows of RX9 Ultra and AX-2 32 is completely different. I have gained 18 and 16 feet per second respectively and they are smoother with a much better valley and back wall.

Plus you have full integration, much better balance, and marginally lighter.

Technology is not always a moot point.

I mean Hoyt themselves would contradict that. A RX-3 from 2019 is shooting the exact same FPS and comes in 0.1lb lighter than a RX-9. From their own stats. It might be a bit smoother or different break over point, but that’s 90% preference of the shooter anyway.


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OP
Treeratslayer

Treeratslayer

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 20, 2021
Messages
148
At what point does the price and practicality balance out for the “bang for your buck” so to speak?

It depends on what you mean by bang for your buck. None of us will shoot a new bow better than a 10 year old bow. If you want to go from 60 to 70 lbs you will notice a difference in performance. If you want to go from a 2015 bow to a 2025 bow it is unlikely you will see a difference in performance. Advertising and marketing will make us believe but won't change performance.

I am going 60 to 70, so yeah that’ll be my biggest upgrade. I also plan to go from my “entry” level Hoyt to likely a flagship model. So higher in components and such. I’m not sure where price and practicality balance. I know I’m not going to spend $2100 on a rx9 when a rx3 can be picked up at less than half the price and shoots the same exact specs.

The speed and weight side of things have really hit a wall it seems. Now it’s just about it being “new”. I don’t need it to match my jacket lol


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NMJM

FNG
Joined
Aug 2, 2022
Messages
86
Location
New Mexico
Nothing could be further from the truth. If you believe this, you really gotta go shoot new bows side by side with your ten year old bow.

I can tell you that I have friends who still have bows like the Hoyt Carbon Defiant and the Mathews Vertix. I have done just that and the performance, feel, everything is night and day better.

Even just the jump from the RX8 Ultra and Alpha X 33 I had last year to today's bows of RX9 Ultra and AX-2 32 is completely different. I have gained 18 and 16 feet per second respectively and they are smoother with a much better valley and back wall.

Plus you have full integration, much better balance, and marginally lighter.

Technology is not always a moot point

Nothing could be further from the truth. If you believe this, you really gotta go shoot new bows side by side with your ten year old bow.

I can tell you that I have friends who still have bows like the Hoyt Carbon Defiant and the Mathews Vertix. I have done just that and the performance, feel, everything is night and day better.

Even just the jump from the RX8 Ultra and Alpha X 33 I had last year to today's bows of RX9 Ultra and AX-2 32 is completely different. I have gained 18 and 16 feet per second respectively and they are smoother with a much better valley and back wall.

Plus you have full integration, much better balance, and marginally lighter.

Technology is not always a moot point.
I just don't see the improvements you do. 18 and 16 fps is a decent improvement but not worth the cost of a new bow to me. Everything else is more subjective, how it feels, how smooth it is does not directly translate into accuracy or killing more animals. The marketing videos, influencers and ads give us a placebo effect of how great all the new bows are. In reality they are not much different than the last several years. At the end of the day if people like getting new bows ever year or 2 go for it. I just don't see people (myself included) actually shooting any better. I had a 2014 PSE Premonition and upgraded to a Mathews Lift 33. After several months with the Mathews I was shooting the same size groups as my PSE. The idea that new bows are so much better because of all of the advancements in design and tech is a scam to me. Its a great way to sell more bows not to make shooters more accurate. Just my personal experience and opinion.
 
Joined
Oct 28, 2021
Messages
855
I mean Hoyt themselves would contradict that. A RX-3 from 2019 is shooting the exact same FPS and comes in 0.1lb lighter than a RX-9. From their own stats. It might be a bit smoother or different break over point, but that’s 90% preference of the shooter anyway.


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What IBO lists and actual speeds are two entirely different things. Nothing ever hits listed specs. But having bought three new Hoyts every year and chronographing them every time, I can tell you that the numbers I listed are real world. Same poundage. Same let off. Same arrow. Drastically different performance.
 
Joined
Oct 28, 2021
Messages
855
I just don't see the improvements you do. 18 and 16 fps is a decent improvement but not worth the cost of a new bow to me. Everything else is more subjective, how it feels, how smooth it is does not directly translate into accuracy or killing more animals. The marketing videos, influencers and ads give us a placebo effect of how great all the new bows are. In reality they are not much different than the last several years. At the end of the day if people like getting new bows ever year or 2 go for it. I just don't see people (myself included) actually shooting any better. I had a 2014 PSE Premonition and upgraded to a Mathews Lift 33. After several months with the Mathews I was shooting the same size groups as my PSE. The idea that new bows are so much better because of all of the advancements in design and tech is a scam to me. Its a great way to sell more bows not to make shooters more accurate. Just my personal experience and opinion.
And that’s great. Everyone has to decide if something, anything really, is worth the asking price. There is nothing that is genuinely worth anything without humans attaching a value to it. Gold for instance.

For me, buying new toys even if there isn’t any real improvement, is worth it to me. Money doesn’t play much part in those decisions. I would have bought new like I do each year even if they had the same performance. The fact that they made so many changes is a bonus and knowing that it’s flying that much faster with the same arrow is a great bonus.

But I absolutely agree that it’s an individual decision and if someone is perfectly happy with a ten or fifteen year old bow, I’d still share a beer and a fire with them and never give it a second thought.
 

NMJM

FNG
Joined
Aug 2, 2022
Messages
86
Location
New Mexico
And that’s great. Everyone has to decide if something, anything really, is worth the asking price. There is nothing that is genuinely worth anything without humans attaching a value to it. Gold for instance.

For me, buying new toys even if there isn’t any real improvement, is worth it to me. Money doesn’t play much part in those decisions. I would have bought new like I do each year even if they had the same performance. The fact that they made so many changes is a bonus and knowing that it’s flying that much faster with the same arrow is a great bonus.

But I absolutely agree that it’s an individual decision and if someone is perfectly happy with a ten or fifteen year old bow, I’d still share a beer and a fire with them and never give it a second thought.
100% agree.
 
OP
Treeratslayer

Treeratslayer

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 20, 2021
Messages
148
And that’s great. Everyone has to decide if something, anything really, is worth the asking price. There is nothing that is genuinely worth anything without humans attaching a value to it. Gold for instance.

For me, buying new toys even if there isn’t any real improvement, is worth it to me. Money doesn’t play much part in those decisions. I would have bought new like I do each year even if they had the same performance. The fact that they made so many changes is a bonus and knowing that it’s flying that much faster with the same arrow is a great bonus.

But I absolutely agree that it’s an individual decision and if someone is perfectly happy with a ten or fifteen year old bow, I’d still share a beer and a fire with them and never give it a second thought.

I’ll be honest. I’m just jealous I can’t afford to do that. If I had the money I’m sure I’d buy one every year too.


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