According to the February 1991 issue of Consumer Reports, the MOL White-Westinghouse Dual-Tumble FL they tested (stackable, front-control model LT250L; same machine as my 1993 LT350R) had a retail price of $699, when the MOL top-loader they tested was $429. The TOL machine, with controls on the backsplash, twin dispensers, and an end-of-cycle signal, had a retail price of $759! This was when a new TOL Maytag was $635 (over $100 cheaper!), so cost must have played a huge part in their limited popularity. It figures that they're so damn hard to find in decent shape; most I've seen on eBay and Craigslist, regardless of location, have been rode HARD and are rusting all over! Out of the two machines I've seen in Texas (including mine), both were the later Dual-Tumble version (the last year for the Potato-Pulley was 1988) and one was in horrible shape. Mine was still pretty bad, but now that it's been painted and has a plexiglass top, it looks better. I still haven't seen a Potato-Pulley machine near me, though. You'd think, if I was able to find an early-60's GE Combo (which, with the pedestal controls, is pretty rare in itself), one of these would eventually surface! Of course the fact that they were built like tanks (with cast iron, and later, concrete, tub weights) attributed to the cost. The rust issue was really a downfall, in my opinion; I'm willing to bet that if porcelain coating was used in the front panel (at the very least), these things would last forever!