Australian Guitar

Godin Radiator

FANCY SOME BOUTIQUE STYLE WITHOUT THE WALLET-BUSTING PRICE TAG? WELL, GODIN’S NEW RADIATOR IS EXACTLY THAT: A CANADIAN-MADE GUITAR THAT MIGHT WELL BE ONE OF THE BARGAINS OF THE YEAR.

- REVIEW BY DAVE BURRLUCK.

Godin’s original Radiator launched back in 1999 as a very retro-styled entry-level model – the antithesis of the more complex dual- and three-voice (including synth access) electrics that the Canadian company was becoming known for. It used the elongated single-cut SD shape, pretty similar to today’s

LGXT, with a bolt-on 24-fret maple neck, while the fairly heavily chambered body was covered with pearloid, including a full-face scratchpla­te, creating that retro vibe and probably inspired by certain Magnatone electrics from the ‘50s. Along with a string-through bridge with six L-shaped saddles, it featured a pair of retro-y Rickenback­er-style single coils with dual volumes and a master tone all mounted on its plastic front. That original model also came in a range of natty colours, too.

Today’s version certainly has some of that

DNA, although the body shape follows the more contempora­ry single-cut outline used on Godin’s Summit Classic SG. The colours are also more muted like our matt Trans Cream with its tortie face; the Matte Black version comes with a black fascia, while Bourbon Burst features a whiter pearloid facing. Incidental­ly, the colour-matched pearloid is also overlaid on the very classic-style and back-angled three-a-side headstock here.

Like the original, the 45-millimetre thick silver leaf maple body is chambered, but here it’s more heavily done, though that aspect of the design is not mentioned in any Godin marketing. It means the guitar drops comfortabl­y below the 3.6-kilogram mark, but certainly doesn’t feel feather-light. In fact, it’s got a good business-like and purposeful feel to it, less gimmicky perhaps than that original design.

Now, you could bash it up a bit and load it up with boutique parts, and a design like this could easily set you back $3,000. But Godin has long loaded in the quality while keeping costs pared down, thanks to their immense production experience. We’ve mentioned the matt body finish, which is obviously quicker to apply than a high gloss. The neck appears brown-stained and is a little more silky satin in feel, but we’d guess that’s pretty fast to apply, too. There’s a little rear edge chamfering on the back, but otherwise we just get an edge radius to the slab body. The heel is left square and Gibson-esque, and the neck appears to be a three-piece constructi­on with its headstock spliced on and a heel stack.

Godin doesn’t go deep on pickup specs. These are clearly covered and classic looking with individual volume and tones, a shoulder-placed toggle and output jack below the lowest controls. It means, of course, that all the wiring and pickups can be mounted to the face-plate, although with 13 screws to attach it to the guitar (there’s a hidden screw under the bridge) you won’t want to be removing and replacing it too often. Don’t worry, though – we’ve done it for you (see Under The Hood, opposite).

And while the Summit Classic SG sported a rather nice Graph Tech ResoMax Sonic 1 one-piece “wraparound” bridge, the wrapover here is more generic in style, a heavier cast bridge with raised ridges to act as intonated ‘saddles’. Overall, intonation is via the two protruding steel bolts that connect directly to the steel posts adding to the rather Melody Maker-like vibe.

The craft is excellent, particular­ly for the price. The neck really does feel like it should be on a much higher priced guitar. It features a Gibson-like scale length and similar 12-inch radius, and the medium gauge fretwire is beautifull­y installed and highly polished. The fingerboar­d edges are lightly rolled, too, and the Graph Tech Tusq nut is perfectly cut.

In terms of profile it’s a pretty regular medium C style: 21.5mm at the first fret and 24mm at the 12th, almost Fender-y in lower positions with a little more bulk by the heel. Aside from needing a slight tweak of the truss rod, the setup is low and slinky as supplied with a string height of 1.3mm on the high E and 1.5mm on the bass.

The very retro Godin logo’d tuners are a little special as well, with a very smooth feel and higher-than-usual gear ratios (18:1 on the bass side and 26:1 on the treble), which makes them very fine tuning, especially on the treble side. Once we’d stretched the strings, we barely touched them: this is one very stable guitar.

The bridge, though, is a little rudimentar­y. Intonation was slightly sharp overall during our test, but that can be easily dialled in with those outer pair of Allen key bolts. If you live in the upper-fret positions, certainly chordally, it simply might not be ‘in’ enough, but we suspect this guitar has more of a rock ’n’ roll aim.

Although we have four controls they’re not laid out like our benchmark Gibsons; the outer treble pickup volume and tone are lower than the closer neck pickup pair. It’s hard, then, to do the classic move where you can pull up or down both volume or tone controls simultaneo­usly with a swipe of your right hand. It’s not a dealbreake­r, but it is a slightly different drive and you’ll need a cable with a right-angled jack for the face-mounted output socket, of course.

Despite hanging on (or should that be clinging on?) to its retro past, this Radiator is revoiced with much more rock intention. It’s kind of like a pawnshop relic from the ‘50s that Larry DiMarzio modded back in New York city in the early ‘70s. There’s nothing wrong with that, nor the sounds we’re hearing with a nicely gained Marshall-y amp voice where the bridge has that sort of overwound grind about it that would grace most classic rock to early metal styles perfectly. The neck is no slouch with a tube-y voice that, in the environmen­t, has just enough clarity for those vocal lead lines. On a cleaner Fender-y channel, it ain’t a Tele that’s for sure, although the mix does add a little more chime and some dirty funk, especially if you knock the neck volume back a little.

It’s a thicker, tougher sound than you might expect, and you can’t help thinking that some coil-splits and/or a simple treble bleed circuit would add some versatilit­y to what is a very good-playing guitar. If the original Radiator was more indie, this one is more alt-rock, armed with some pretty serious clout. Above all, it’s the playabilit­y that punches way above its weight. Godin really knows how to make a good guitar.

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