Shooting The Bowīeauty may be in the eye of the beholder (and I find this to be one sharp-looking bow), but fit & finish are a little less subjective, and the Element RKT I examined out of the box takes fit & finish of a bow to a whole new level. the 7-inch brace height of the original Element. the 323 fps rating for last year’s Carbon Element and (not coincidentally, I’m sure) a slightly skinnier 63⁄4-inch brace height for the Element RKT vs. The Rocket Cam is essentially the latest incarnation of the Cam & 1/2 system that Hoyt introduced to the market to much acclaim in 2003, a system that links the top & bottom cams with a control cable to reduce timing issues.īasic specs for the Carbon Element RKT remain the same with the exception of the 330 fps ATA speed vs. The Carbon Element RKT (along with several other bows in Hoyt’s 2012 line-up) features Hoyt’s new Rocket Cam, touted as both faster and smoother than the FUEL cams that powered Hoyt’s higher-end bows last year. The Element boasted an impressive array of new technology including XTS Pro Arc Limbs, FUEL cams, a newly designed lower-friction in-line roller guard, Stealthshot damping material, Silent Shelf (a soft rubber-like coating on the shelf to deaden sound), and an offset stabilizer. Last year Hoyt tweaked the Matrix and added the Element to its carbon line-up. The new Carbon Element RKT is the third generation of Hoyt’s carbon riser bows, which began with the radical-looking Carbon Matrix in 2010.
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