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2 reviews from our community
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"Exactly what I was looking for. It's..."
Exactly what I was looking for. It's great!

"I recently purchased it after doing a..."
I recently purchased it after doing a bunch of research and I think it’s great.
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Actual feedback of people who want to buy Godin A10 Black Steel HG
- "It speaks for itself."A 18-24 y.o. male fan of John Lee Hooker from Bosnia and Herzegovina
- "I love it"A 18-24 y.o. male fan of Coldplay from Georgia
- "I heard it's a gold!"A 18-24 y.o. male fan of Damian Marley from Bosnia and Herzegovina
People that took the "IS IT GOOD FOR ME?" test said they wanted to buy Godin A10 Black Steel HG for the above 3 reasons. Their opinion is based on their own independent research and should help in your own purchase decision.
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"A surprisingly refined, versatile grand-auditorium with a wider nut that plays and records above its price."
Review of Harley Benton Custom Line CLG-48CE Wide NT
I picked up the Harley Benton Custom Line CLG-48CE Wide NT to see whether a budget-friendly grand-auditorium could deliver both acoustic presence and a usable plugged tone for gigging and recording. My use case was mixed - home practice, small cafe gigs, and quick DI recording sessions - so I needed a guitar that felt comfortable, projected well unplugged, and had an onboard system that didn't make me chase tone endlessly at the board.
First Impressions
The CLG-48CE Wide NT looks more expensive than it is - the natural high-gloss finish on the solid spruce top and walnut back and sides gives a classy, restrained aesthetic that drew compliments the first time I took it out. Out of the case the neck felt slightly chunkier than modern slim profiles, thanks to the 48 mm nut width, which immediately told me this is aimed at players who want a bit more room at the nut - fingerstyle players and beginners included. The overall fit-and-finish was tidy for the price, with clean bindings, straight frets, and no obvious glue squeeze or fret sprout to contend with.
Design & Features
The body is a cutaway grand auditorium with a solid selected spruce top and walnut back and sides, built on a scalloped X-bracing layout - that combination gives the guitar a balanced tonal footprint and good dynamic range for both strumming and picking. The neck is okoume with a pau ferro fretboard, 20 frets and a 643 mm scale, and the 48 mm nut is a noticeably wider-than-average specification that improves string spacing while slightly changing the neck feel compared to 43-45 mm nuts. Electronics are a Fishman Sonicore undersaddle transducer with a Fishman Presys-II preamp and onboard tuner - a familiar and practical package that keeps the signal useful for direct inputs without being fussy.
Build Quality & Protection
Structurally the guitar felt solid and well assembled for its price point - the walnut back and sides are stable and the spruce top was free of finish blemishes. The chrome die-cast tuners held stable through several tuning cycles and the saddle and nut appeared well-cut, giving me predictable action after a basic setup. I recommend a light setup out of the box - I lowered the action slightly for my style and checked intonation, but nothing major was required to turn it into a very playable instrument.
Playability & Usability
The 48 mm nut makes chord stretches and fingerstyle patterns comfortable - I noticed fewer accidental thumb mutings and more room for hybrid picking. The neck profile and fretboard radius felt friendly to players who prefer a little meat under the thumb; barre chords are effortless, and single-note lines articulate cleanly. The cutaway gives easy upper-register access for leads and harmonics, and the overall balance when seated or standing with a strap is neutral - it doesn't neck-dive and feels comfortable for multi-hour practice sessions.
Sound & Electronics
Unplugged the CLG-48CE Wide NT has a centered, even voice - the spruce top gives crisp highs and good transient clarity, while the walnut body adds a nicely controlled low end that avoids boominess. It responds well to both full strumming and fingerpicked passages; I found it particularly satisfying for pop and singer-songwriter arrangements where a balanced, articulate acoustic is desired. Plugged in, the Fishman Sonicore and Presys-II give a clean, serviceable DI-ready tone that translates well to PA and interface; it can sound a touch processed compared to the unplugged voice, but with quick EQ and a touch of reverb I got usable live and recorded results without wrestling with feedback or severe tone-shaping.
Real-World Experience
I used the guitar for a couple of cafe gigs and several home recording takes - on stage its balanced projection cut through a small trio without amplification, and the plugged signal needed only minor EQ to sit nicely in the mix. For recording I tracked both mic and direct signals and found the onboard system very convenient for scratch takes and quick DI layers; for final production I preferred a condenser mic on the spruce top, but the Fishman DI was a very usable starting point. The guitar held tuning well between songs and survived being moved in and out of cases without drama.
The Trade-Offs
This is not a perfect instrument - the plugged tone, while practical, doesn't fully mirror the nuanced acoustic voice and may require blending with a mic for high-end studio work. Out of the box action and intonation are fine for most players but benefit from a light professional setup if you want extremely low action or optimized playability for advanced techniques. Finally, the wider nut will be a comfort for many, but if you come from slim-neck electric guitars the feel may take a little adjustment.
Final Verdict
The Harley Benton Custom Line CLG-48CE Wide NT punches well above its price - it combines a solid-spruce top, walnut body, and dependable Fishman electronics into a very playable grand-auditorium that suits a broad range of players. If you want a versatile acoustic that covers home practice, small gigs, and quick recording work without breaking the bank, this is a strong candidate; players seeking absolute studio perfection may still mic it, but as a go-to gig and practice guitar it delivers excellent value.
by Musicngear Verified Community ReviewsHelpful Tips & Answers
- Is the nut really 48 mm and does that make it hard to play for smaller hands?
- Yes - the nut measures 48 mm and it gives noticeably wider string spacing; I found it more comfortable for fingerstyle and hybrid picking, though players with very small hands may need a short adjustment period.
- Does the onboard Fishman preamp sound usable for live gigs?
- I used the Presys-II live and found it perfectly usable for small gigs after a touch of EQ at the mixer; it’s clean and avoids excessive feedback when set sensibly.
- How is the action out of the box - does it need a setup?
- Out of the box the action was playable and fine for most styles, but I lowered it slightly for my preference and checked intonation - a quick setup improves playability for demanding techniques.
- Is the top solid spruce or laminated?
- The top is solid spruce - that gives the guitar better resonance and aging potential compared to laminated tops in this price bracket.
- Does the guitar hold tuning and are the tuners reliable?
- The chrome die-cast tuners held tuning reliably for my sessions and I didn’t experience slippage during gig use.
- Would you recommend this guitar for a beginner?
- Yes - the wider nut and comfortable neck are friendly for beginners who want room to form chords, and the onboard electronics make it practical for performing without extra gear.

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"A hybrid thinline that trades perfect polish for enormous tonal flexibility and serious gig value."
Review of Harley Benton Custom Line Nashville Steel
I spent several weeks playing the Harley Benton Custom Line Nashville Steel and came away impressed by how much tonal territory it covers - from warm, acoustic-like piezo tones to a surprisingly usable lipstick-pickup electric voice. My context was home practice, small rehearsals and a couple of low-volume live tests, so I got to evaluate both its unplugged feel and its amplified behaviour in real situations.
First Impressions
Out of the case the Nashville Steel presents itself like a stylish single-cut thinline - the flame-black burst finish and the thin body give it an immediate stage-ready look. The neck felt reassuringly substantial but not awkward, and the onboard hybrid preamp suggested versatility before I even plugged in; my first plugged-in tests made it clear this is a guitar designed to live where both electric and acoustic voices are needed. There were small cosmetic details - a slightly proud jack plate and a bridge sitting on a subtle arch - that made me slow down and check the hardware, but nothing that killed the initial enthusiasm.
Design & Features
The Nashville Steel is a hybrid-thinline built from a solid mahogany body veneered with flamed maple, a mahogany neck and what the factory lists as a Jatoba fingerboard - it’s a compact, comfortable package with a 648 mm scale and a 43 mm nut. The control layout is straightforward: a passive lipstick single-coil in the neck position, a bridge-mounted piezo feeding an active preamp with a hybrid-blend system, and a single output - the idea is you can dial anywhere between vibey electric and acoustic-like piezo tones. DLX machine heads, a walnut bridge and D'Addario strings out of the box complete the spec sheet - for the money the hardware choices are sensible and targeted at gigging flexibility.
Build Quality & Fit
My sample showed the archetypal Harley Benton blend - very good value construction overall, with a handful of finish and fit-and-finish quirks that are worth calling out. The binding around the cutaway and the jack-plate fit could use tidier attention, and the glued bridge sits on a slightly arched top which leaves the very corners a touch thin on contact - these are the kinds of things that don’t affect playability immediately but are worth noting for long-term reliability. That said, the neck set, fretwork and tuners were functional and stable after a modest setup, and the dual-action truss rod gives a useful adjustment range.
Playability & Comfort
The neck profile is on the chunkier side of “C” to my hand - I found it comfortable for chord work and fingerstyle, and it encouraged a relaxed fretting hand for the kind of hybrid picking I like to do. Action and intonation came into a good place after a straightforward setup - the 21-fret board and 648 mm scale feel familiar and friendly to players coming from acoustic backgrounds. The thinline body makes prolonged standing sessions easier, and it’s light enough for long practice periods without feeling flimsy.
Electronics & Amplified Tone
Where the Nashville Steel really shines is in its tonal palette - the piezo bridge gives a clear, focused acoustic voice and the lipstick pickup adds a warm, jazzy electric tone with pleasing mid-scoop when overdriven. Blending the two yields interesting hybrid textures that sit well in a mix - think a bright acoustic shimmer with a touch of electric presence underneath. A few caveats - on my unit the lipstick pickup’s output was noticeably lower than the piezo at some blend positions, and the blend control is sensitive enough that small movements produce big timbral changes; both meant I spent time dialing in preferred settings for each context. Overall the preamp and pickup pair give a breadth of tones useful for soloing players, singer-songwriters and small bands, but some users will want to tweak pickup heights or the preamp routing for ideal balance.
Real-World Experience
I used the guitar in bedroom recording, a rehearsal with a rhythm section and a quiet cafe gig; in each setting the hybrid concept made sense. For unplugged practice it behaved more like a quiet hollow instrument - you get some acoustic resonance without the projection of a full dreadnought. Plugged through a small acoustic amp the piezo voice cut well and sounded immediate, while a tube combo with a touch of warmth made the lipstick pickup sing for bluesy leads. In band mix situations I ended up favouring either pure piezo or pure lipstick settings instead of a 50/50 blend, simply because the blend can introduce phasey artefacts at certain settings - but that’s as much a tonal character as it is a limitation.
The Trade-Offs
If you want a museum-grade finish and flawless hardware you’ll find better in higher-priced instruments - the Nashville’s strengths are versatility and value rather than boutique-level fit-and-finish. Expect to spend a little time on setup, possibly adjust the lipstick pickup height, and know there’s a small risk of cosmetic blemishes or minor assembly issues with any single production example. On the flip side, the tonal flexibility and the ability to cover both acoustic-ish and electric roles with one instrument is very powerful for giggers and home recordists on a budget.
Final Verdict
The Harley Benton Custom Line Nashville Steel is a thoughtfully conceived hybrid that punches well above its price when you factor in what it replaces on stage or in the home studio. I recommend it to players who need one versatile instrument to deliver both acoustic flavours and electric character - singer-songwriters, small-venue giggers and recorders who like to experiment with blended tones. If you are ultra-sensitive to cosmetics or need factory-perfect hardware out of the box, budget a setup and small mods - but for what it is and what it costs, I found it to be a compelling, playable and musically useful instrument.
by Musicngear Verified Community ReviewsHelpful Tips & Answers
- Does the Nashville Steel sound more like an electric or an acoustic?
- It can do both - pure piezo sounds acoustic and the lipstick pup gives a warm electric voice, but I usually pick one or the other for live work to keep the mix clean.
- How is the stock setup and action out of the box?
- Out of the box it was playable but benefits from a basic setup - a truss adjustment and saddle/bridge tweak brought it into great action and intonation for my style.
- Is the lipstick pickup loud enough compared to the piezo?
- On my example the lipstick was noticeably quieter in some blend positions so I raised it and adjusted the amp gain to balance them for stage use.
- Will I need to swap pickups or electronics?
- Not essential - the onboard system is versatile - but players chasing higher output or a specific humbucker voice may upgrade the lipstick for more punch.
- Is this guitar suitable for recording?
- Yes - I got usable DI-ready piezo tracks and lovely lipstick takes, and the hybrid blend gave me creative options without mic’ing the top in many cases.
- How durable does it feel for gigging?
- It feels solid enough for regular gigging, though I recommend a case and a quick pre-show check of pickup heights and the jack plate on older samples.

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