That's not a pair of headphones...THAT'S a pair of headphones!

Soldato
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Most of you are going to think I'm a bit mad here, but I'll post this all the same. So at least that way, you'll know I'm mad. These headphones are the butt of many jokes over at Headfi, perhaps deservedly so(!).

On eBay last week, I happened upon a pair of potentially cheap Jecklin Floats. After being burned by some git who managed to win some Ergo 2s that I was bidding on a week previous, I thought I'd try my luck this time around.

I won the auction for the sum total of £7.75 delivered to my door.

They were being sold by some bloke who was clearing out his recently deceased brother's gear and stated that the foams were partially disintegrated, and somewhat manky. Upon arrival, they were indeed manky. Very, very manky. They reeked of cigarette smoke, were generally grimy and had more fluff, dust and other cack on than is natural for anything, let alone a pair of headphones. They left a weird, sticky and unclean feeling whenever they were handled which affected somewhat OCD levels of hand washing. They also had a dead connection or three at the connector, but seemed to work with the connector held in precisely just the right position.

So back off to eBay I went, and ordered some speaker grill cloth and a new 1/4" jack.

I stripped the headphones to their component parts, cleaned them all over with methylated spirit, cleaned the drivers (lots or hair - bleurgh), bathed the metal grills in paint stripper to remove glue residue (and that awful sticky crud), then left all the plastic parts to soak in a bowl of water detergent over night. After drying everything, all the bits were decidedly clean and no longer stank.

I spent a couple of hours reassembling them this evening, fitting new grill covers and foams. The end result is this:

Float01.jpg


Float02.jpg


What do I think?

Well, they're very comfy and they look awesome (pic below undisputably confirms this).

floats.jpg


How do they sound? Best described as a bit like a big old pair of good quality speakers from about 1985. Fantastic soundstage, nice mid range, but have a tendency to get a bit muddy at the bottom end and seem to fall over themselves in complex bassy passages. Very laid back, which is rather nice - good for a bit of relaxed late night listening. They definitely benefit from being cranked up too, where everything becomes a bit less mangled and wooly, but warm and well, better defined.

For a total of ~£17 I think they're a bit of a steal.

Now to find some Model Twos or Ergo 2s...
 
Most people who haven't tried them think they look uncomfortable, but believe me when I say they're the comfiest cans I've worn. They just sit on your head and barely contact your ears. They're very open, so don't get warm at all really.
 
Cool, done well for less than £20.

Got anything to compare them to?

-AKG K701s which sound thin, bright and thrashy compared (I really don't get on well with them for the most part but they seem to look nice on my desk).

-Modified Sennheiser HD580s which are also very comfy, and don't look as odd (funnily enough!). These are my favourite cans, but if what I've read about the Float Model 2s and Ergo 2s is true, this could well change. Putting on the 580s after the Floats is like turning down the midrange, increasing instrumental separation and adding a lot more detail to the bass.

All powered by my Shanling PH100 amp.
 
I remember seeing these a little while back, they were pretty expensive back in the 80's weren't they?

Good work on rebuilding them, they look great
 
Oh nice, that's pretty damn awsome (and that word is seriously over used, but I think it fits here) for less than a tenner!

From what you said about how they sound I bet they work beautifully for blues, jazz and swing.
 
I remember seeing these a little while back, they were pretty expensive back in the 80's weren't they?

Good work on rebuilding them, they look great

They weren't that much money really, about 100 notes iirc. The Float 2s were a little more, and the electrostats probably a lot more.

Oh nice, that's pretty damn awsome (and that word is seriously over used, but I think it fits here) for less than a tenner!

From what you said about how they sound I bet they work beautifully for blues, jazz and swing.

Indeed, they are very good for jazz, especially female vocals.
 
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