I've yet to see any manufacturer that doesn't inflate their numbers by a few. Like he said above, they shoot and tweak, shoot and tweak, shoot and tweak, shoot and tweak and take the highest number they can get to advertise with. Some are worse than others; generally Hoyt has proven to be the closest over my chrono, but they are still 1-4fps inflated. Mathews seems to be the highest inflation at around 5-8 fps. You have to really tweak a bow to get the number they advertise. Once you get the right combination of limb torque, rest tension, string length, etc., then you might get the factory number, but you won't have a bow that shoots worth a darn. The main way they can inflate the number is in the draw length tolerances since the IBO rating doesn't have any tolerance factor specified like the AMO number does. If you chrono a bow that has a 30.25" draw length and then call it an IBO number that should have been done at 30", then that's inflation in my book.