It's all there, including the meat pan up top but is missing ice trays down below.
It's in nice shape, but I wouldn't pay $400 for it. I have the top freezer version of this fridge from 1957. Defrosting isn't a real big deal, but I also don't have a rolling basket assembly to get frozen in place if I let things go too long.
I think if you stay on top of it, you can defrost fairly quickly. There's a drain in the bottom floor of the freezer so melted ice build-up simply flows away into a pan underneath the fridge. Just make sure the pan is still there.
I use a vintage electric heater designed for the purpose of defrosting. From emptying the fridge, plugging in the heater and walking away, to returning to free up any remaining sections of ice and wiping the interior dry, I'm done in about an hour, with very little effort.
Keep in mind that with this style of fridge, you can't have the hinged side up against a wall. You need to allow room for the thickness of the door to open. Starting in 1957, the exteriors took on the modern day squared off look, doors were outfitted with shoulder hinges to allow them to be built in and eliminated the need for the extra room on the hinged side, and the units had clean backs with coils placed under the fridge and a fan to provide "forced draft" cooling of the condenser, a system that's found on all but the cheapest models of refrigerators built today.
If you'd rather not defrost, GE rolled out its "Frost Guard" system starting with the 1959 models.
