Effect Audio Axiom In-Ear Monitors Review - Modular Sustainability! 12

Effect Audio Axiom In-Ear Monitors Review - Modular Sustainability!

Effect Audio Maestro Cable »

Packaging and Accessories


Unlike a more traditional product loaner tour, such as with the Meze Audio Liric headphones we saw recently, the Effect Audio Axiom review package shipped directly from Effect Audio and was sent back to them. As this is how you would receive the IEMs, we begin with a look at the shipping packaging. Given the Axiom also came with a cable, both items shipped in identical cardboard boxes with branded tape. These came inside a DHL plastic bag that thankfully hid all of this from public view. Each of these boxes opens up in the same manner to reveal the actual product box in a plastic wrap.


The Axiom packaging is simple, but layered, which really goes against the eco-friendly, sustainable Effect Audio marketing. The glossy outer plastic layer goes through different shades of green depending on the incident light, with a demo sticker on one side and printing on all sides indicating product name and type, as well as some salient marketing features. You then have to peel this layer off to get to the inner cardboard box with more geometric patterns and remove the lid to get to the contents. But even here is more waste in the form of two cards glued to a pamphlet, none of which is necessary. At the same time, a barebones packaging might have received complaints since the Axiom is a premium product, so Effect Audio really dug themselves a hole here.


One of these two cards is a warranty card with a QR code that takes you to a registration page, and one year of warranty is once again not in line with the sustainability approach. I would have liked 2–3 years at least if the goal is to have the Axiom be a long-lasting product. The other card's QR code is supposed to take you to this URL, which does not work because Effect Audio has since changed the URL to take you here. However, there is currently very little of note there, certainly no promised user manual. These are all adding up to a poorly executed lofty goal. Underneath is more cardboard, with layers instead of foam or plastic adding protection in the first move from Effect Audio I agree with. The individual IEMs are in shaped holes that snugly hold them in place, and you now get a multi-sensory experience in the form of touch, sight, hearing, soon to follow with the IEMs, and smell with loose tea powder from the SG-based Gryphon Tea Company in a bag that is not meant for consumption, only the pleasant aroma during unboxing. I appreciate the love given to a local company, but more relevant are the various accessories in individual compartments. These include a precision Phillips head screwdriver, two modules we will examine over the course of this review, and ear tips, of course.


Effect Audio is going minimalist in more ways than one as there is only one ear-tip type in sizes S, M, and L. These are silicone ePro Horn-shaped ear tips employing a wide bore and are designed to enhance the higher frequency sound signature while retaining the highs and mids. These cost $14 for the set. While IEM pricing plays a role in what to expect when it comes to ear tips, I would have still liked an additional type at least—be it memory foam or otherwise. Relying on a single type in three sizes to accommodate the fit and HRTF preferences of a global audience is a massive gamble.
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Jul 20th, 2024 11:16 EDT change timezone

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