But the point is not to sound like that guitar, and pulling the tone knob is like getting a second guitar to work with. This gets you closer to a "Strat" tone, but with less snap than the real thing. Even when piling on the modulation effects, the fundamental tonality remained intact.Īnd something interesting happens when you pull the tone knob up to split both humbuckers: You get a bit of the "quack" back when combined with the middle pickup. While that might disappoint some, it works great with vibe, chorus, and phase effects to create lush, detailed and hypnotic chords that shimmer nicely when the notes are individually picked out. The effect is a more clean and distinct with less quack. Combined with neck or bridge pickup you also don't get strong "out of phase" tones that you expect from a Strat. It's more of a smooth rhythm vibe with enough sparkle support the mix but not get lost in it. Putting a Tele-style pickup in the middle position does not get you that classic compressed bell tone. Something you can play all night and never get tired of hearing it. The bridge pickup does not have bite of an open coil humbucker but we loved how it sounded through our JAM Pedals Tubedreamer: Plenty of crunch and harmonics, but a refined smooth top end without any metallic edge. Neck tones have a nice warmth that does not overly mask the high end, and there is a pleasant midrange emphasis lends gravitas without sounding muddy. Selecting the neck and bridge pickups gives you much of what you might expect out of those positions. The Cajun pickup is down a tad on output, but overall matches nicely in tone with the covered neck and bridge pickups. The 'buckers are direct mount, so any pickup output balancing is accomplished with the middle pickup. There is still ample note definition, but the woods and covered pickups ever so subdue the highs and gives it a touch less attack. In contrast to the basswood Carbon Black Radium version, the mahogany center section, mahogany neck and covered humbuckers gives the Winchester model a warmer slightly more mid-focused vibe. Looking somewhat like the Fender-Gibson love child, the Godin Radium combines a multitude of influences to create a surprisingly broad array of tones. Volume, Tone controls w/pull split tone control.Godin nickel covered humbucking neck and bridge pickups.24.75" scale 12" radius mahogany set neck.Mahogany Center body with Basswood wings.The new Godin Radium Winchester Brown features The model we have is lighter as shown in the photo The mahogany center sections of the Radium do vary in color with each model, and some do have a very dark center section. Not to mistaken for anything else, the Radium sounds as unique as it looks and is an excellent value. Featuring a unique mash up of Fullerton-meets-Kalamazoo pickups, body shape and scale length, the Radium packs a diverse set of tones in a comfortable, easy to play package. The Winchester Brown model has an eye-catching finish, worthy of a classic/aged vintage guitar.For 2020, Godin has introduced the new Radium line of guitars. The guitar is voiced with Custom Godin Nickel-Covered Humbuckers for vintage tones, with the addition of a Godin Custom Cajun Nickel Single Coil in the middle. The Radium also comes equipped with a H-S-H pickup configuration for a multitude of tonal possibilities, and a re-invented vintage-style control plate, which has a Volume, Push-Pull tone, and an angled Super 5-way switch that follows the natural sweep of your right hand for easy pickup selection. The Godin 049295 Radium Winchester Brown RN offers some unique features compared to the more traditional single cutaway solid-bodies, such as a short-scale (24 ¾") set-neck and a 3&3 headstock design for comfortable playing and bending.
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