Here is the user
manual for the Thorens TD 160. This turntable was produced from 1976 to 1984. 1984 was when CDs first hit the market. Interestingly the manual just says to connect the RCA plugs to the amplifier input. It does not specify an RIAA phono input. So back then it was assumed that everyone knew that you had to connect a turntable to an input of high sensitivity with RIAA correction. How times have changed, as back then the writer of the manual did not feel he had to state the obvious.
With the introduction of the CD, turntable sales plummeted and everyone assumed the LP was a dead medium. Thorens went bankrupt. The name was bought by new owners after the LP revival. The current Thorens is not the Thorens of old, that actually goes back longer than the phonograph, as they started as a manufacturer of Swiss musical boxes. They were complex and you could change the cylinders to change the music. I have seen them in museums and they are works of art. I don't think they ever made wax cylinder machines, but they were early manufacturers of acoustical gramophones to play the Emil Berliner discs that became the 78 RPM shellac disc.
They were the principle competitor to Garrard in the 1950s and 1960s. The TD 124 went head to head with the Garrard 301. Here is a picture of a TD 124 with an Ortofon arm.
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The last of this illustrious line was the Thorens TD 125 MK II.
That is my Thorens TD 125 MK II that I restored with an SME Series III arm. That combination is about as good as it gets.