Hoyt’s 2025 aluminum flagship compound is quiet, fast, balanced, accurate, and a great in-the-field companion. The Alpha AX-2 32 is worth every penny if you’re in the market.

by Jace Bauserman

I’ve been shooting Hoyt’s Carbon RX-9 for several months. I love it. Hoyt hit a sweet spot with the 33-5/15 axle-to-axle length, and the Gen 4 HBX Cams allow for extensive customization. The RX-9 is currently sitting in a Plano bow case, preparing to take an airplane ride across the big pond to New Zealand, a dream trip for me. The fast-shooting, balanced, and smooth-drawing RX-9 Ultra has earned my trust. I’ve put more than 1,200 arrows through it, and it is Hoyt’s finest carbon bow-build yet.

Read The Full Hoyt RX-9 Review Here

Still, I’ve always been drawn to Hoyt’s aluminum bows. I know I sound like a broken record. In fact, I’ve never penned a Hoyt bow report, and I’ve done many of them, without noting my love affair with the 2009 compound flagship, the AlphaMax 32.

Of course, Hoyt’s flagship aluminum series is always a win, and I’ve had remarkable in-the-field success with the Ventum Pro, VTM, Alpha X, and others. I am honest with every product review I write, and when it comes to hunting, I tend to end up putting the necessity of filling my freezer each fall on the back of a Hoyt aluminum—not carbon—model.

Why?

I shoot each bow head-to-head, and typically, at least for me, the aluminum wins my heart.

Why The RX-9 Ultra For New Zealand?

The RX-9 Ultra is, without question, Hoyt’s best-ever carbon model. Whether I love it or, more importantly, shoot it more accurately than the new-for-2025 Alpha AX-2, the jury is still out. I haven’t spent as much time behind the AX-2 as the RX-9. Still, I’ve spent many hours building the AX-2, tuning it, conducting speed tests, and sending enough arrows downrange to do a bow report to pass to prospective buyers. And I promise you’ll read more about it right here at Born Hunting in the future.

Tested True: Hoyt Archery Alpha Ax 2 32
The author killed a tom mountain lion in January 2025 with the RX-9 Ultra.

Expect more head-to-head videos and comparisons on our website and Instagram Page in the coming days and months.

Hoyt Alpha AX-2 32

The latest in Hoyt’s Alpha lineup is a trio of AX-2 models—the 32-5/16 axle-to-axle and  29-1/2-inch axle-to-axle rigs steal the show. However, this savvy bow maker also unveiled a 29-1/2-inch SD model that fits draw lengths between 23 and 27 inches. What more could a short-draw archer ask for? 

My Alpha AX-2 32 was an out-of-box stunner. The riser is Black, and the limbs are my favorite Hoyt solid color: Bourbon. Without accessories, the 32-inch model comes in at a without/accessories weight of 4.55 pounds, lighter than last year’s Alpha X 33.

Tested True: Hoyt Archery Alpha Ax 2 32
The Black (solid and camo options are many) riser and Black limb pockets give way to numerous limb-color options, including Bourbon.

Drop cord slots remain. I’m a down cable rest guy, and I appreciate how the draw slots keep the cord out of the bow’s grip. The biggest story, though, concerns the HBX Gen 4 Cam System. Engineered around shooter customization, draw-length adjustments can be made in 1/4-inch increments to achieve a just-right fit and feel. Shooters can also choose between three letoff (75, 80, and 85 percent) settings and backwall options for Hard and Xtra Hard. If you prefer a valley, you want the Hard option. Something new to the HBX cam is the new-for-2025 five-module system. With five modules versus three, Hoyt engineers could optimize every inch of speed and efficiency.

Tested True: Hoyt Archery Alpha Ax 2 32

The cam system draws like butter. The transition to the chosen letoff (I tried them all) is not abrupt, and the bow holds on target ultra-steady.

Hoyt claims the AX-2 32’s five-module system and overall bow build are faster than the 2024 Alpha X. I found this true. With my Alpha X 33, my 407-grain 4mm Easton Axis Long Range arrows produced an average three-shot arrow fps rating of 294. That was at a draw length of 28.75 inches and a draw weight of 67.22 pounds.

While I did most of my Alpha AX-2 testing with Easton’s all-new 5.0s, I conducted the speed test with the same 4mm Easton Axis Long Range arrows. I set the Alpha AX-2 32 bow to a tested draw weight of 67.22 pounds and a draw length of 28.75 inches, and my average three-shot speed rating was 297 fps. Shooting Easton’s 380.1-grain 5.0s, the bow hit a top speed of 307 fps.

Tested True: Hoyt Archery Alpha Ax 2 32
Hoyt’s Alpha AX-2 32 shot Easton’s 4mm Axis Long Range and 5.0 arrows remarkably well.

For a full review of Easton’s 5.0’s Click Here

With just a tick over 32 inches between the axle pins, the bow is neither long nor short. For me, it hits a sweet spot. I cheer bows with an axle-to-axle length between 32 and 33 inches. For me, bows in this axle-to-axle range carry well, are balanced and stable at full draw, and are ideal for sit-and-wait and spot-and-stalk hunting.

Naturally, the bow build was a breeze. For my attached accessories, I went with the usual suspects: a Spot-Hogg Boonie sight and a QAD MX2 rest.

First Arrow

My first arrow is never through paper. I’ve set up enough bows to know my final build will be nearly perfect.  I want to get familiar with the bow before I start punching holes in the paper. Hoyt’s WIREWRX strings are solid; they do stretch, though. There is no sense in tuning a bow until you get at least 100 arrows through it.

My first arrow out of the bow press, and you can watch this arrow on my YouTube channel, was 12-ring perfect. The shot was only 20 yards, but the newly designed Easton 5mm Microlite Nock stuck straight toward me, and I detected zero nock travel.

My second shot was from 60 yards. I’ve dialed in enough Spot-Hogg five-pins in bows with fps ratings between 280 and 313 to get my pin-gap close enough to hit a BLOCK Infinity. My 19-year-old son Hunter stood behind me. The shot broke perfectly, and though it was two inches high of the square I was aiming at, Hunter’s exact words were, “Dad, that flew like a dart.”

You know you and a bow will get along when you take a bow from the press and put two killing shots on target from 20 and 60 yards.

Tested True: Hoyt Archery Alpha Ax 2 32

After 20 minutes, I had a Spot-Hogg sight tape picked out, and though I never recommend moving this quickly, I was on a roll with the AX-2. On average, selecting a sight tape takes me two weeks. With the AX-2, two weeks after that first 20-minute shooting session, I still used the same sight tape. The bow was spitting darts to the tested distance of 123 yards.

After 100 arrows, I put a four-fletch Flex-Fletch 2.5 vane arrow through the paper. I had an ultra-minor tail-right tear, which I cleaned with two .0019-inch clicks via QAD’s UltraRest MX2. If you have not shot this rest via its back-riser face attachment, you’re missing out. I can’t give the rest higher praise.

To Read A Full Review of QAD’s MX2, Click Here

Hoyt Alpha AX-2: Balanced, Accurate, Quiet

I don’t geek out about bow speed. The bows of today are fast. I care that a bow is balanced at full draw, the pin holds on target, the arrow hits where the pin is when the release breaks and the rig is church-mouse quiet. Hoyt’s Alpha AX-2 checks all the boxes.  

I shot this bow in wind, rain, snow, and one balmy spring day. It’s a Hoyt! When tuned properly, the bow is remarkably accurate. This is a prerequisite to achieving accuracy with any compound bow. The bow, even at 67.22 pounds, is plenty fast. After turkey season, I plan to return the bow to its max draw weight of 70 pounds. FYI, Hoyt bows, which I love about, tend to run a bit over a pound—or two pounds in some cases—above peak weight. Using a digital bow scale, my AX-2 32 produced a draw weight of 71.83 pounds.

Tested True: Hoyt Archery Alpha Ax 2 32

Hoyt AX-2 32 Specs

  • Axle-to-Axle: 32 5/16 in.
  • FPS: 336
  • Weight: 4.5 lbs.
  • Brace Height: 6-1/2 inches
  • Draw Length: 5-module system (26-31 inches)
  • Peak Draw Weights: 40-80 lbs.

Final Thoughts

Hoyt’s 2025 aluminum flagship is a win. It’s a prototypical Hoyt—a bow you drop off a cliff, go pick up, and as long as you didn’t skimp on accessories, center the pin and kill an elk. The bow shoots ultra-accurate, is maneuverable, a tick lighter and faster than its predecessor, and a bow that fills me with shooting confidence.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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