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I had a look through the manual ( most was in German), but I could find whether this will work for 110 or 240V and whether it is 50 or 60 hz. Made in Germany and had a 10/72 ink print on the box. These obsoleted GE and they left the business, some 4 years behind. Elac miracord 50h ii - 110/240V and 50/60H Just hanging out with my father in law and he offered offered me his 50H II. Which could use those cartridges, and could also cope with the Empire light trackers, and the ADC light trackers. This revolution was Shure's introduction of the M 44 line, the M 55E, and the V 15 and Dual's introduction of the 1009, the first light tracking, true HiFi changer. First redesign and clean sheet of paper from Garrard was their replacement of the RC 60 economy changer with the AutoSlim of 1962, designed in cooperation with Plessey of England (the company who helped save Garrard after the 1960 factory fire in Swindon, and milked the company dry later on), the Laboratory changers were concurrent then, and the LAB 80 of 1963. And the lightest tracking options were integrated tonearms and for manual turntable use only. Remember than until 1964, record changers tracked at 4 grams at lightest in HiFi. When this was first designed, 5 grams was very light tracking force for a changer of any kind. Click to expand.That less than smooth motion of the tonearm reject/change cycle was sort of a holdover from the Garrard Laboratory A and A II mechanisms, the last pusher platform traditional Garrard changer which was an evolution and last refinement of the first Garrard 3 speed changer of the early 1950's.