Foodi FlexDrawer AF500 vs Foodi Max Dual Zone AF400
A side-by-side readout for noise.
Understanding noise
Noise is a numeric spec measured in dB. On this metric, lower values are generally better — smaller, lighter, thinner, or less demanding usually translates to a more comfortable or more efficient product. When comparing two products, focus on the percentage gap rather than the raw delta: a 200-unit lead means something very different at the low end of the range than at the high end. Pay attention to the unit, too — manufacturers sometimes quote peak or burst figures that are not sustained in real-world use. Cross-check the published number against independent measurements where possible, especially for performance and battery claims. Finally, remember that a single spec rarely tells the whole story; the Mars Score weighs noise together with the rest of the spec sheet so one outlier doesn't distort the verdict.
This matchupIn this spec, Foodi FlexDrawer AF500 and Foodi Max Dual Zone AF400 are effectively tied at 58dB — buyers can treat them as equivalent on noise alone.
Other specs on this comparison
See the full Heißluftfritteusen category for all products ranked by Mars Score.