Apple AirPods Max 2 vs Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000 | TechTalkTown
Apple AirPods Max 2 vs Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
Apple AirPods Max 2
Apple
7.6
A great-sounding chip upgrade trapped in a six-year-old body
Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
Audio-Technica
8
A featherweight, hyper-detailed open-back — for treble lovers
Apple AirPods Max 2
What Reviewers Agree On
The H2 chip and a new high-dynamic-range amplifier deliver a genuine, audible sound upgrade over the original AirPods Max — cleaner, more detailed, tighter and less bloated bass
Noise cancellation is excellent and back near the class top — measured at roughly 89% average attenuation with especially strong low-frequency (20-200Hz) cancellation
Best-in-class Apple-ecosystem integration — instant pairing and effortless automatic switching between iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple TV
Premium aluminium-and-steel build with a breathable knit-mesh headband that genuinely outclasses the plastic of rival flagships
Spatial Audio with head tracking is the best implementation among over-ear headphones, especially for movies and TV
Pros & Cons
Apple AirPods Max 2
Pros
The H2 chip and a new high-dynamic-range amplifier deliver a genuine, audible sound upgrade over the original AirPods Max — cleaner, more detailed, tighter and less bloated bass
Noise cancellation is excellent and back near the class top — measured at roughly 89% average attenuation with especially strong low-frequency (20-200Hz) cancellation
Best-in-class Apple-ecosystem integration — instant pairing and effortless automatic switching between iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple TV
Premium aluminium-and-steel build with a breathable knit-mesh headband that genuinely outclasses the plastic of rival flagships
Detailed Comparison
Sound Quality
Apple AirPods Max 2
The clearest win of this generation. The H2 chip and a new high-dynamic-range amplifier give the AirPods Max 2 a noticeably cleaner, more detailed and better-controlled sound than the original — though the tuning leans bright and there is still no manual EQ.
The original amplifier had limited headroom and a higher noise floor that capped sound quality; the new high-dynamic-range amp removes that ceiling, and the bass is more accurate and less bloated than the original AirPods Max.
Apple says any improvement in sound and noise cancelling is strictly down to the H2 chip and a new high dynamic range driver — Apple did not change the physical design.
Z Reviews describes the Max 2's sound as open, clean, detailed and neutral-bright — very detailed and energetic, not the front-of-class leap Apple's '1.5x better' marketing implied.
TechTalkTown may earn a commission from purchases made through links below. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This does not influence our reviews. Learn more.
USB-C wired playback unlocks 24-bit/48kHz lossless and low-latency audio straight out of the box
Deal Breakers
Battery life is unchanged at 20 hours with ANC on — 10 to 40 hours behind class rivals like the Sony XM6, Bose QC Ultra 2 and Sennheiser Momentum 4
At 386g the headphones are heavy and many reviewers find them uncomfortable past the 45-90 minute mark, with no comfort changes in six years
An unchanged $549 price for what is essentially a chip-only upgrade — reviewers repeatedly question the value
The divisive Smart Case still offers no real protection and leaves the headband exposed; there is still no power button
There is no manual EQ, only AAC/SBC over Bluetooth (no LDAC/aptX), and the experience is degraded on Android
Several owners report battery-drain and connectivity bugs that Apple is expected to address via firmware
Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
What Reviewers Agree On
Exceptionally light at roughly 257g, with a 3D wing-support headband that makes the headphones effectively disappear during long listening sessions
Class-leading detail retrieval, resolution and clarity for a $999 dynamic-driver open-back — reviewers say it goes toe-to-toe with pricier planar headphones
Premium build quality despite the low weight, with a refined open-air design and replaceable plush velour ear pads
A genuinely open, airy presentation with good instrument separation and a coherent, holographic soundstage
Strong value at the $999 price for buyers who want technical, audiophile-grade performance from an easy-to-style headphone
Deal Breakers
Bright, treble-forward tuning with a sharp peak near 4 kHz that can sound harsh or fatiguing, especially for treble-sensitive listeners
Sub-bass rolls off below roughly 50-60 Hz — bass-focused listeners will find it lacks visceral low-end slam without EQ
Purely passive and wired — no Bluetooth, no ANC, no microphone and no battery, so it is unsuitable for commuting, calls or travel
Uses a proprietary A2DC connector and ships with a mediocre stock cable, so cable upgrades mean buying into a less-common termination
Spatial Audio with head tracking is the best implementation among over-ear headphones, especially for movies and TV
USB-C wired playback unlocks 24-bit/48kHz lossless and low-latency audio straight out of the box
Cons
Battery life is unchanged at 20 hours with ANC on — 10 to 40 hours behind class rivals like the Sony XM6, Bose QC Ultra 2 and Sennheiser Momentum 4
At 386g the headphones are heavy and many reviewers find them uncomfortable past the 45-90 minute mark, with no comfort changes in six years
An unchanged $549 price for what is essentially a chip-only upgrade — reviewers repeatedly question the value
The divisive Smart Case still offers no real protection and leaves the headband exposed; there is still no power button
There is no manual EQ, only AAC/SBC over Bluetooth (no LDAC/aptX), and the experience is degraded on Android
Several owners report battery-drain and connectivity bugs that Apple is expected to address via firmware
Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
Pros
Exceptionally light at roughly 257g, with a 3D wing-support headband that makes the headphones effectively disappear during long listening sessions
Class-leading detail retrieval, resolution and clarity for a $999 dynamic-driver open-back — reviewers say it goes toe-to-toe with pricier planar headphones
Premium build quality despite the low weight, with a refined open-air design and replaceable plush velour ear pads
A genuinely open, airy presentation with good instrument separation and a coherent, holographic soundstage
Strong value at the $999 price for buyers who want technical, audiophile-grade performance from an easy-to-style headphone
Cons
Bright, treble-forward tuning with a sharp peak near 4 kHz that can sound harsh or fatiguing, especially for treble-sensitive listeners
Sub-bass rolls off below roughly 50-60 Hz — bass-focused listeners will find it lacks visceral low-end slam without EQ
Purely passive and wired — no Bluetooth, no ANC, no microphone and no battery, so it is unsuitable for commuting, calls or travel
Uses a proprietary A2DC connector and ships with a mediocre stock cable, so cable upgrades mean buying into a less-common termination
The Max 2's vocals sound more forward and engaging than the Gen 1, but on default settings without Headphone Accommodations the two are not dramatically different.
SoundGuys notes Apple itself delivers slightly better audio on the cheaper AirPods Pro 3 in some regions — the Max 2 dips a little more around the mid-treble in their measured frequency response.
There is still no manual EQ slider — you are stuck with Apple's tuning unless you use Headphone Accommodations as a workaround.
GSMArena's verdict: the sound is good and the H2 brings real gains, but the AirPods Pro 3 ends up being another thing the smaller, cheaper earbuds do better.
Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
The ADX3000 is built around a 58mm dynamic driver and tuned bright and detail-forward. Reviewers consistently praise its resolution, clarity and dynamic punch, but the lively treble — with a sharp peak near 4 kHz — divides opinion, and sub-bass rolls off for those who want low-end slam.
Delivers resolution, clarity and technical performance that reviewers say is incredible for the price — the only dynamic-driver headphone in this range that can go toe-to-toe with pricier planars like the HiFiMan Arya Organic.
Tuned bright and hyper-focused with an emphasis on the upper mids and lower treble — human voices, violins, pianos and acoustic guitars sound more lifelike, though the treble peak makes the overall tonal balance a little wonky.
There is a sharp peak right around 4 kHz; on a 10-band EQ you can pick the 4 kHz band and drop it by 4-5 dB to tame the brightness as a starting point.
Bass extends down with a W-shaped lift around 100 Hz and the sub-bass is described as quite nice, but it is not as visceral or punchy as the pricier ADX7000 or Caldera Open.
Bass distortion was not something this reviewer could provoke even as a bass-heavy listener — the driver stays clean under pressure.
Soundstage is open and airy with good left-to-right separation, but it does not feel huge — instruments revolve around you rather than spreading out wide, and it does not match the Focal Utopia.
The relaxed mid-range followed by a more forward treble makes the presentation clinical and superb for detail retrieval, but that treble energy can become fatiguing over long sessions depending on how you listen.
Treble-sensitive listeners report the top end is spicy and present, with clarity and extension — noticeable but not enough to cause ear discomfort the way some bright headphones do.
Reviewers report the drivers benefit from roughly 100 hours of mechanical break-in, after which the treble peak and midrange prominence chill out and more sub-bass impact comes through.
Comfort & Design
Apple AirPods Max 2
The build is genuinely premium — aluminium cups, a steel frame and a breathable knit-mesh headband that outclasses rivals' plastic. But Apple changed nothing in six years: at 386g these are heavy, reviewers split on whether they are comfortable past 45-90 minutes, and the Smart Case is still widely disliked.
The aluminium chassis, breathable mesh headband and magnetic ear cushions feel very Apple, very polished and very expensive — but at 386g you absolutely notice them on your head, especially during longer listening sessions.
GSMArena argues Apple should have addressed weight in this generation — simply making the Max 2 30% lighter would have gone a long way toward making them more approachable.
Apple didn't change probably the number-one concern of the AirPods Max — making them more comfortable — and after years the over-the-top band still gets weighed down and heavy over time.
Stephen Robles doesn't notice the clamping strength in the first 20-30 minutes, but it becomes uncomfortable for him around the 45-minute-to-hour mark and beyond.
After 30 days the clamping force loosens and the earpad foam softens — one long-term reviewer rated comfort as roughly on par with the much-lighter Sony XM6 once broken in.
The all-metal build is genuinely premium, but the design causes metal-on-metal contact that scratches the $550 headphones over time.
The Smart Case — widely nicknamed the bra or purse case — still leaves the headband exposed and offers little real protection, and there is still no power button.
Reddit owners of the first Max echo the disappointment that the weight and the much-mocked case carry over unchanged into the Max 2.
Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
The ADX3000's headline trait is its weight — around 257g makes it one of the lightest premium open-backs available. A 3D wing-support headband, plush velour pads and a low-but-firm initial clamp combine into a fit reviewers say quickly disappears.
Crazy light at 257g — a paperweight compared with most headphones in its class — and that lightness is a major comfort advantage for long sessions.
Audio-Technica navigated the usual lightweight trade-off well — it stays very lightweight and comfortable yet still feels and looks extremely premium.
The 3D wing-support system plus plush velour pads mean the padding mostly touches the skull rather than clamping, which helps avoid headphone fatigue and makes it easy to forget the headphones are on.
Measured clamp force is around 600-750g — it can feel a little firm the moment you put it on, but the combination of weight, soft pads and clamp means it very quickly becomes one of the least intrusive headphones this reviewer has worn.
Value vs Competition
Apple AirPods Max 2
At an unchanged $549 the Max 2 is a hard sell on pure value. Against the Sony XM6 and Bose QC Ultra 2 it trades battery and weight for build quality and ecosystem; against Apple's own $249 AirPods Pro 3 reviewers question why anyone outside the ecosystem would pay more than double.
Z Reviews argues the premium build and Apple-ecosystem connectivity make the Max 2 look like decent value at $50 cheaper than the plasticky Sony XM6 and Bose QC Ultra 2 flagships.
The Sony XM6 costs around $400 new and offers 30 hours of battery — 10 more than the Max 2 — making it the more practical daily driver despite a less premium build.
9to5Mac calls the AirPods Max 2 'more of a status symbol than an actual product worth $550', recommending the AirPods Pro 3 for most Apple users instead.
The Bose QC Ultra 2 offers 30 hours of battery for about $100 less and is roughly 120g lighter, beating the Max 2 on the two specs that matter most for travel.
Tom's Guide concludes you are paying for the Apple ecosystem, the design and a bit of status — the value case rests almost entirely on owning other Apple devices.
Reddit owners repeatedly say $549 is hard to justify for headphones used only part-time, with several preferring Bose for comfort-plus-ANC at a lower price.
Audio-Technica ATH-ADX3000
At $999, the ADX3000 is positioned against planar open-backs and Audio-Technica's own pricier ADX5000 and ADX7000. Reviewers broadly call it strong value for a buyer who wants technical performance, with the ADX3000-vs-ADX5000 question coming down to tuning preference.
Retails for $999 as an open-back single-driver headphone — reviewers call it a very good entryway into high-end headphones and could not find much wrong at the price.
Offers HiFiMan-style clarity and resolution combined with good dynamic punch, incredible build quality and very low weight — a combination reviewers say is hard to beat in this price bracket.
Versus the pricier ADX5000: some reviewers say the significantly cheaper ADX3000 actually has the better tuning, while others give the ADX5000 a higher-end feel and a slightly wider horizontal sound field.
For the price point it is a solid, near-the-top performer for accurate, lifelike balance between fundamentals and harmonics — though one reviewer stops short of calling it class-leading.
One reviewer found this the least comfortable of the headphones in a comparison group, a reminder that fit is head-shape dependent despite the low weight.
Build quality is high-end — reviewers describe super high-end quality and build, with a simple black open-back-with-mesh-grille aesthetic rather than flashy luxury materials.
Left/right channel markings on the cups are small and easy to miss, and the stock cable carries no side marking — a minor everyday annoyance.
Buyers on a tighter budget who still want the Audio-Technica house sound can consider the much cheaper ATH-R50x or ATH-R70x, which are easier to drive and a fraction of the price.
Reddit owners frame the ADX3000 as a fun, clear, open headphone with a nice treble pop and consider it a worthwhile plunge for listeners coming from mid-tier sets like the Beyerdynamic DT1990.