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2016 Mathews Halon Bow

  • nexgenoutdoors
  • Apr 22, 2016
  • 1 min read

The Halon is also outfitted with a Mathews Harmonic Damper and Harmonic Stabilizer to keep shot noise and vibration to a minimum. The Halon measures 30 inches between the axles and is available with your choice of 65, 75 or 85 percent letoff and 5-, 6- or 7-inch brace heights.

Five finish options are highlighted by the new Lost XD camouflage.

MSRP on the 2016 Halon 6 is $1,099.

The result is enhanced efficiency and increased energy storage that makes it Mathews’ hardest-hitting flagship bow to date while still maintaining a stealthy draw cycle and excellent accuracy.

Other Halon highlights include wider, more torsionally rigid limbs, an all-new bridged riser, true-center nock point that is straight and level throughout the shot cycle and new FlatBack Grip for precise and consistent hand placement.

The Mathews Halon 6 is extremely smooth. The best descriptive word I can think of is “comfortable.” Any harshness you might expect from a “speed” bow was absent. Of course, this smoothness can mostly be attributed to the Crosscentric cam system, which blends Mathew’s No Cam technology with their AVS System. In other words, it successfully combines smoothness with speed.

To be honest, I did not have to touch the arrow rest on my Mathews Halon. This bow tuned as easily as any bow I’ve shot. Once I had my sight pins adjusted to the speed of the bow I was shooting darts at all ranges.

 
 
 

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