1940's Cavalier / Frigidaire "water bath" Coca-Cola Cooler...

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I was showing this post to my wife yesterday and it brought up a lot of memories for us. The Rollerway, which was a local teen rollerskating indoor rink with hard wood floors had one of these. We remember this well. The unit was in a small room just barely fit the machine, behind the machine was a door that that they used to stock the machine from the back. The floor had heavy rubber mats with large holes in it for the water to go through when you pulled the bottles out. This way that water stayed in that room instead of going out onto the hard wood floors. Many a happy Sunday afternoon was spent there, and always had a pop or two while taking a break from skating. It was great to watch the water swirl around all the bottles with all the colorful caps showing. Thanks for this thread and I glad to see these again. Time period for us was late 60's early 70's.

Jon
 
We have Vernor's waaaaaaaay out here on the left coast.  I can remember it being popular with the hippie dippy organic types in the early '70s.

 

I'm surprised that Squirt isn't widely known like other popular soda flavors.  It's been around as long as I can remember.  When I was a kid, I "salvaged" a metal advertising sign for Squirt (maybe 16" x 36" or so) from a small grocery store that had ceased operations.  I remember giving it away to a friend a few years later.

 

I don't recall ever having seen one of these swirling type coolers.  The oldest I remember were the ones that had the necks of the bottles sticking up, and you had to grab the small  exposed portion of the neck and slide (yank, actually) the bottle down and jog it over to the area where it was possible to extract it.  I could never get the hang of it.  I don't think I've seen a cooler of that type since I was 10 or so.
 
When I was a young child in the early '60s, a store in Gadsden, AL, down the street from my grandmother's house, had one of these. There was nothing better than pulling out a Coke, in the old heavy glass bottle, from that just-this-side-of-freezing water. They had a towel hanging from a peg in the front of the machine for you to dry off the bottle, next to the opener. I remember them having Coke, Nehi orange and grape, Sprite, Dr. Pepper, Double Cola (a regional brand), RC Cola (another regional brand), Tab (which was awful) and Yoo-Hoo (which was also awful). They had a grape drink that IIRC was yellow in color, carbonated, and not as sweet as Nehi. I liked them, but one day they didn't have them anymore. My great uncle told me that the company that made them had gone out of business. That was a difficult concept for a 5-year-old to understand.

RP2813, I remember the type of machine you are talking about. The bottles hung from metal tracks, which held them at the narrow part of the neck, a couple of inches under the cap. There were several rows. You'd slide the one you wanted to the end of the row, where there was a perpendicular track that ran to an area where it was wider, but there was a plastic piece that prevented the bottle from being pulled out. When you point coins in, you could pull on the bottle and the plastic piece would tilt up out of the way and let you pull the bottle out. It was purely mechanical except for the refrigeration. I last saw one of these in the early '80s, in an office where I was a co-op student. Since we bought drinks in bulk from the distributor, they rented us the machine cheap and gave us the keys. We set it for free dispense and just had everyone chip in every two weeks to pay for the delivery. One day we had a computer prototype that kept shutting down because it was overheating. So we put it inside the drink machine. It worked perfectly. The distributor delivery guy showed up and wondered why the machine had ribbon cables running out from under the lid...
 
Dustin

Thanks for the info concerning Vernors and Squirt. I researched both and found the following:

Vernors is a ginger flavored soft drink and the oldest surviving ginger ale brand in the United States. It was created in 1866 by James Vernor, a Detroit pharmacist.

Squirt is a caffeine-free, grapefruit-flavored, carbonated soft drink, created in 1938 in Phoenix, Arizona. Squirt (originally named Citrus Club) was created by Herb Bishop in 1938, after experimenting in college. The result used less fruit juice and less sugar than some other drinks, and Bishop claimed it had the "freshest, most exciting taste in the marketplace".

I believe we have Squirt here just never tried it. Ive never been much of a soda drinker.
 
Double Cola and Royal Crown were both common on the west coast.  We had a Double Cola bottling facility in an old corrugated quonset hut just a few blocks from our house when I was a kid -- and I liked Double Cola best.

 

RC and their no-calorie brand, Diet Rite Cola, can still found today.  I think 7-Up may own them now.  I bought a 12-pack of RC (because it was on sale) not too long ago.  Not all stores carry it.  I'm not a cola snob, so any brand is OK with me.
 
Royal Crown

Yup. We have RC on the east coast as well.
I think, like you said, you don't see it in every store, but we do have it.
And, it's been around for a while!
This old tin sign came out of a store that my wife's family owned ages ago.
It's supposed to have a picture of a bottle on the left side as well.
Unfortunately, someone must have chopped it off due to space limitations in the store or something.
Still a nice looking sign.

Barry

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So the owner of this cooler got in touch with his auto body man and the repairs are a go for sure. I took the cooling system out and built this sexy wooden work stand for it. I don't think I need to quit my dayjob to become a carpenter!

 

The test stand keeps the lines in their proper shape. Also, I an hang a bucket of water over the evaporator coil and put load on the unit that way for testing.

 

The wiring was hideously deterio-rotted.

 

Removed wiring from the relay compartment as well. It was all extra crunchy.

 

Notice the warranty seal is still in place over the cover screw on the control!

 

The fan motor.... is a real work of American engineering. The motor is 100% sealed. There was no dust in it at all. It has replaceable standard ball bearings. This was an early maintenance-free motor and it apparently worked for 50+ years. Only after the cooler was abandoned and not run for decades did the bearings dry up.

 

The quality I am seeing here on all parts of this machine is a real attest to Frigidaire and GM.  This was a commercial unit so the engineers got to play and not be constrained by bean counters as they were with the residential stuff.

 

Will get fan motor bearings tomorrow and this motor will go back together for another 50 years.

 

 

 

 

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Yes that is right at the freeze point!  With that much ice water, it would not take long to cool down any new soda bottles placed in there - that's for sure!

 

My neighbor plans to use this at church picnics and fundraiers, so it will see fresh water each time. Hopefully that will minimize wildlife habitation in there!
 

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