

A little aggressive, yet still fairly smooth with a definitive drop into the valley and a decent back-wall. It does present with a shorter brace height (6 1/8"). The bow is very light! It weighs in the same as Bowtech's Carbon Knight (also 3.2 lbs), but in my opinion, the Carbon Air has a much better overall balance.

When I first picked up the Carbon Air, the 3.2 lb bare weight of the bow was the first thing I noticed. The bow also features PSE's "Hyperdrive" cam. The specs on the Carbon Air are as follows 6 1/8" brace height, 32" Axle-to-Axle, IBO speed sits at 340 fps with an 80% let-off, bare bow weight in the hand is 3.2 lbs. I am not accusing PSE of copying Hoyt, but if I was in the market for a new bow, I might raise my eyebrows to the fact that a new 2016 bow resembles another manufacturer's model from 4 years ago. So, I am going to start with the obvious, I personally think the new Carbon Air looks incredibly similar to Hoyt's Carbon Element, another bow I have in my own personal inventory.
