Compared: AirPods Max vs AirPods Max with USB-C

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in iPod + iTunes + AppleTV

After almost four years, Apple has finally updated the AirPods Max. This is what has changed in Apple's premium headphones.

Five sets of AirPods Max in different colors
AirPods Max new colors: starlight, orange, purple, blue, midnight



Apple introduced the original AirPods Max in December 2020, and hasn't changed them at all since then. While other products have received changes over time, the AirPods Max stayed static.

With the AirPods Max approaching four years since their introduction, it was overdue to get an update. As part of the "Glowtime" special event in September, Apple did just that.

The new AirPods Max are pretty close, if not almost identical, to the old ones. This is less an overhaul and more a refinement and an upgrade.

Here's what Apple did to its premium headphones after four years.

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - Specifications














































































Specifications AirPods Max (2020) AirPods Max (2024)
Price $549
Blowout savings
$549
Weight (ounces) 13.6 13.6
Foldable No No
Primary Materials Aluminum Aluminum
Noise Cancellation Yes Yes
Transparency Mode Yes Yes
Charging port Lightning USB-C
Connectivity Bluetooth 5.0 Bluetooth 5.0
Microphones 9 Total 9 Total
Battery Life 20 hours with ANC 20 hours with ANC
Fast Charging 1.5 hours from 5 minutes 1.5 hours from 5 minutes
Controls Digital Crown, Button Digital Crown, Buttons
Other Sensing Optical sensor,
Position sensor,
Case-detect sensor,
Accelerometer,
Gyroscope
Optical sensor,
Position sensor,
Case-detect sensor,
Accelerometer,
Gyroscope
Colors Space gray
Sky blue
Pink
Green
Silver
Midnight
Blue
Orange
Purple
Starlight

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - Physical design



The original AirPods Max were made of a combination of aluminum and steel. Large, rounded earcups attached by telescopic arms to a shiny steel frame going over the user's head.

A person with red hair wearing orange AirPods Max on an orange background
AirPods Max didn't get a design update, but there are new colors



The frame was interesting in design, as it divided into two spokes that formed the actual headband. A stretchy fabric between the spokes was pulled down between the tubes, creating a form of cushion without needing padding.

The smooth earcups, uniquely Apple in design, also had massive, removable ear cushions.

At 7.37 inches tall, 6.64 inches wide, and 3.28 inches thick when fully deployed, the original AirPods Max were pretty chunky headphones. The extensive use of metal also meant they were fairly weighty at 13.6 ounces.

Apple's design also meant that the AirPods Max didn't fold down for storage. However, the earcups could rotate so that they could lie flat, such as in their Smart Case.

Inside each earcup is an Apple-designed dynamic driver, intended to deliver audio over a wide range.

It's a 40mm unit designed with a dual neodymium ring magnet motor. This was meant to maintain total harmonic distortion to less than 1 percent across the entire audible range.

The design has remained identical as Apple only introduced new colors. The color selection is now blue, purple, midnight, starlight, and orange.

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - Controls and sensors



Aside from using Apple's software integration with its operating systems, you had a few control options on the original AirPods Max. Both physical controls appeared on the same earcup, at the top.

A person with dark hair wearing purple AirPods Max
The Digital Crown remains



The first was the Noise Control button, which was a simple option to switch between the various ANC modes built into the headphones.

The other was a Digital Crown, borrowed from the Apple Watch. This could be twisted around for volume control, or pressed in to handle various functions, like answering phone calls.

While you could make changes to playback manually, you could also take advantage of Siri support. Uttering "Hey Siri" enables hands-free control of the headphones.

The list of onboard sensors in the original AirPods Max is extensive. Each ear cup had an optical sensor to detect if they were worn, a position sensor, a case-detect sensor, and an accelerometer.

The left ear cup also had a gyroscope.

Apple incorporated a total of nine microphones in the original AirPods Max. Eight of the microphones fed the Active Noise Cancellation functionality.

The one remaining microphone, as well as two shared with the ANC features, were used for voice pickup.

These features remain unchanged with the 2024 update.

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - Audio processing and features



Powering the processing of the original AirPods Max is the H1 chip. With one in each earcup, the Apple-designed chip handled all of the processing for the various onboard features.

A person wearing blue AirPods Max
No changes to audio processing or chipset



This chiefly means Active Noise Cancellation. This is an onboard system that captures external sounds and produces a waveform that is piped to the user, to block out the external environment.

Connected to ANC is Transparency Mode, which is similar in concept. However, it does filter through some environmental audio to the user's ears, so they are aware of their surroundings.

To improve audio quality further, there's an Adaptive EQ, which can tune the sound automatically. Meanwhile, Personalized Spatial Audio is available, complete with dynamic head tracking using the onboard accelerometer.

Apple did not update the AirPods Max with the H2 chip. Therefore, the processing and audio remain identical.

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - Connectivity



The original AirPods Max uses Bluetooth 5.0 to connect to other devices, like an iPhone or a Mac. Since the H1 chip remains, so does Bluetooth 5.0.

As for physical connectivity, the original model used Lightning to handle charging and wired audio. This consists of a Lightning to USB-C cable, though you could also use a Lightning to 3.5mm Audio Cable to plug the AirPods Max into a headphone jack.

The only significant hardware change for the 2024 AirPods Max is the USB-C port. Users can use it the same way the Lightning port was used -- for charging and a 3.5mm headphone jack adapter.

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - Battery life



As a pair of headphones, the AirPods Max benefit from having heaps of internal space available for batteries. Apple took full advantage of this from the start.

Starlight AirPods Max being worn by a person holding the earcups
AirPods Max have the same battery life but charge over USB-C now



The original AirPods Max was said by Apple to last for up to 20 hours of listening time from a single charge with ANC or Transparency enabled. It also managed 20 hours of Spatial Audio audio playback, and up to 20 hours of talk time.

To recharge the old AirPods Max, you connected it to the Lightning cable. A five-minute charge resulted in about 1.5 hours of listening time.

The battery rating hasn't changed.

New AirPods Max vs Old AirPods Max - So what's new?



While it's been practically four years since their introduction, the AirPods Max has been a first-generation device for quite some time. As usual for Apple's initial hardware releases, the second attempt doesn't make any major changes to the design or functionality, but instead gets a bit of a tidy-up.

Unlike an iPhone, where it's more apparent where upgrades are made, it's certainly not that way for the AirPods Max. In fact, Apple did less than the bare minimum and didn't even provide the obligatory chip upgrade.

All that changed was the USB-C port and the new color options. Existing owners need not apply.

Where to buy AirPods Max



The 2024 USB-C update to AirPods Max went up for preorder on Monday, September 9. They are available starting September 20 and cost the same $549.

Blowout AirPods Max deals are in effect on the Lightning port-equipped models, with Amazon dropping the over-ear headphones to as low as $399 at press time. You can compare prices across the entire range in our AirPods Price Guide.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 20
    Unimpressed! Has Apple discontinued development on this product? All I want is a power button.
    dewme
  • Reply 2 of 20
    Why wouldn't you want the H2 chip or Bluetooth 5.2?
    wonkothesanewatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 20
    What an absolute joke. 4 years later and the only changes are colors and USB-C?
    wonkothesaneMisterKitelijahg
  • Reply 4 of 20
    MplsPMplsP Posts: 4,006member
    What an absolute joke. 4 years later and the only changes are colors and USB-C?
    Agreed. They took 4 years to do what an average internet hack could have done in a few hours. 
    elijahg
  • Reply 5 of 20
    So in 4 years all they’ve done is update the charging to USB-C and changed some of the colors? And they still cost $549?!? They use 4 years old tech and lack most of the best features of the AirPods Pro 2. At a bare minimum they needed to update the H1 chip to the H2 and give them feature parity with the AirPods Pro 2. If they had actually updated the AirPods Max I would’ve bought a pair. But I’m not paying $549 for 4 year old tech that was overpriced when they originally came out. With the “changes” they made these should only cost $349 - $400 max. I guess I’ll have to get a pair of Sony WH-1000XM5‘s and just deal with them not instantly connecting like AirPods. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 20
    The article could have been condensed to new colors and USB-C charging. There really is nothing to compare. It's the same gear!
    wonkothesanewatto_cobraelijahg
  • Reply 7 of 20
    So sad: I sold my first pair cause they were so heavy and began to hurt after lengthy wear time, and there was no power on/off button.  I was really hoping for a new release with lighter headband design (did not even care about USB-C).  The audio quality was so impressive and I can only imagine it is better now, but weight and power button absence will leave me with my Bose QC-45.  What is Apple thinking?  Surely after four years they could have released a new design.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 20
    AirPods Max is that unwanted uncle in the family… the most expensive model that doesn’t get any significant firmware updates to enhance its features, new version lacks any features the Pro version has… shame on Apple… what they made of it, this facelift should have dropped at least 100$ off of its price
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 20
    This whole article could be trimmed down to just "All that changed was the USB-C port and the new color options."

    But for a deep woke company it's all about colors and not about specs. And we see this we this old AirPods Max and the AppleWatch Ultra as well.
    watto_cobraelijahg
  • Reply 10 of 20
    Does anyone have a BOM on these? IMO $399 would’ve been more reasonable.

    watto_cobra
  • Reply 11 of 20
    This whole article could be trimmed down to just "All that changed was the USB-C port and the new color options."

    But for a deep woke company it's all about colors and not about specs. And we see this we this old AirPods Max and the AppleWatch Ultra as well.
    You see? We don’t believe that you are anti-woke, so here’s a suggestion.
    Buy a few pairs in “woke” colors (orange, purple), take them out in your yard, shoot them up with your favorite AR-15, post the video and prove your “anti-woke” credentials.   /s
    charlesnwatto_cobraMplsPmacgui
  • Reply 12 of 20
    I think even Apple combine all AirPods Pro features to the AirPods Max, it won’t save this product line, specially it has to shoot higher price level.
    At $549, most of the people will buy it may already bought it within the last 4 years, if Apple did add all latest AirPods Pro features to APMax@$649, I don’t think it will boost the sales figure much, to cover the re-engineering cost.
    Dramatically upgrade the sound quality is the tentpole to the next upgrade, BT6 may not enough, for Apple perspective, the present technology seems unachievable yet, so there is no APMax 2, if ever. The port and color update just lower the barrier to newcomer, if any, and to extend the production facilities live longer for economics scale.
    Wireless Studio Headphone for professional use, I mean for the people who do music for living is quite unrealistic target market. If you pursue high quality of sound, $549 has many other option in the market.
    So, a fanboy needs high quality sound and willing to pay $549, and haven’t buy APMax yet, the UPDATE is for you, the pyramid in the niche market, I can imagine the demand curve may almost stand vertical.
    Apple makes a move for such a small group of people, it is a generosity.
    Hallelujah. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 13 of 20
    charlesncharlesn Posts: 1,081member
    Simple fact: AirPods Max is no longer a flagship headphone, but still carries the flagship price. This Lightning to USB-C "update" could have made sense if Apple had used the opportunity to reduce the price of 'phones with 4-year-old specs, hardware and tech to say, $329. It does this all the time in other product lines--takes older, previously best-in-class tech and moves it to lower price models. $549 was always a lot to pay for wireless headphones considering the much lower-priced competition from flagships by Sony and Bose. But at least you knew you were getting Apple's best effort and latest technologies. Now you're getting ANC and other specs that will be inferior to what the regular AirPods 4 will offer. I don't begrudge Apple its premium prices because they generally deliver a product that I think is worth it. But every once in a while, Apple pulls an egregiously greedy move on its customers, something that makes you think, "Oh, C'MON!" and this is one of those times. 
    muthuk_vanalingamwatto_cobra
  • Reply 14 of 20
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,683member
    That’s a lot of copy and paste to compare two virtually identical products. If you did a delta only comparison the chart would have two categories, charging port and colors. Add a link to the original spec review and there you go, a single paragraph article. 

    I’m sure there are plenty of people who adore their AirPods Max but for a lot of us the sound quality, convenience, exceptional features, and nondescript aesthetics of of the AirPods Pro are too awesome to be ignored. I just can’t see myself ever being out in public with anything resembling the AirPods Max, Beats, or any oversized flashy headphones. I’m not a walking billboard. At home, I’m still okay with wires and bulk and optionally, a nice pair of open back cans when I’m in the mood. 

    Keep the AirPods Pro coming with more frequent updates and me and my ears will be very happy. 


    elijahg
  • Reply 15 of 20
    Well. You got me. I was like, "Wait... Isn't it the Exact same device but with a port switcheroo and new colors? What do they know, that I don't?" 

    Nothing.




    elijahg
  • Reply 16 of 20
    It's headphones.  What changes NEED to be made???  It's not like our ears or the physics of sound has changed.

  • Reply 17 of 20
    It's headphones.  What changes NEED to be made???  It's not like our ears or the physics of sound has changed.

    They released AirPods 4, but why did they need to make those when AirPods 1 worked just fine, and it’s not like our ears or the physics of sound have changed.
    elijahg
  • Reply 18 of 20
    MplsPMplsP Posts: 4,006member
    It's headphones.  What changes NEED to be made???  It's not like our ears or the physics of sound has changed.

    But the technology of getting the sound to our ears has changed. AirPods Max have neither improved nor gotten any cheaper since they were introduced. It's like Chevy trying to sell an Impala with 2014 technology for the same price as all the other cars that have 2024 technology. 
  • Reply 19 of 20
    The first Nothing Headphones…
  • Reply 20 of 20
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,419member
    If these were $249, or better headphones in general, I might have popped for Gen 1. They're just not great audio transducers for the money. I also dislike that same as all other AirPods there's no Off button. So unless they're charging, they're in a constant state of discharge, even in that goofy case.

    Does Apple offer battery replacement for them? A number of manufactures unapologetically do not. I've passed since headphones that are wireless now but become wired in they declining years have no appeal to me.
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