Long story short, I found some old 78's (wife's family, in an old box) that I want to listen to, and my "good TT" won't handle 78's (Thorens TD-160 => 33 and 45 rpm only). Also, from my wife's family, I have a "The Fisher 125 Receiver", AM/FM with a BSR Turntable on top that does 78rpm. I've found a suitable stylus for 78rpm. The problem: the tracking force (stylus recommendation is 3-5 grams) is immeasurably high using a Shure Stylus Force Gauge SFG-2. I bought a service manual, but it says nothing about mechanical setup or adjustments. There is a flat plastic Phillips screw-head next to the tonearm post labeled 2 4 6 which moves smoothly when you turn it, so that's probably the VTF adjustment but turning it has no visible effect on the tonearm balance (it may still work, since the current--problematic--VTF is huge). The aft end of the tonearm (where you might expect to see a counterweight) is a smooth black 0.25 inch OD tubular extension of the tubular aluminum tonearm. I don't see any marks (e.g., from the set screw of a counterweight). Pictures of the Fisher 125 Receiver that I can find on the web are all very dark where a counterweight would go, and my best guess is there wasn't one.

This morning, just trying to find out just how out of balance the tonearm is, I hung large machine nuts on the aft extension of the tonearm; I was able to get a level tonearm by hanging 42 grams very near the aft end of the tonearm (where one would expect to find a counterweight). In the absence of better advice, my plan is to machine a cylindrical aluminum counterweight with a set-screw and a fine-adjust screw at the rear of the counterweight. I'm confident in my ability to do this, but I would be much happier if someone could sugest a better way/the right way to do this.
I am primarily interested in listening to "I Can Hear it Now" (Edward Murrow, Ike, Roosevelt, Churchill, et.al discussing WWII in a five-disk set that looks pretty good) plus a lot of music that looks like it's had a long tough life in a stack with all the other 78's in the stack. Thus, a "does the job" solution that's not quite audiophile-grade would be sufficient in this case.
Thanks for your suggestions and help.
Pete