electric coil heat retention
The instant heat control is virtue touted as an advantage of gas burners, but people who grow up with electric learn to compensate for that. If one screws up and something starts to boil over, needless to say you have to move the pot to another burner, or keep a spot handy off the range (in case the other units are in use) to set the pot. But in ordinary circumstances, one learns to turn down the heat ahead of time from experience with how long it takes the unit to cool and depending on what you're cooking. I remember my Mom's Mom, who had always cooked on an electric range, showing my Dad's Mom, who was switching from gas, how to cook on her Flair range. My Dad's Mom's Flair had all the goodies, Speed Heat unit, temperature sensing unit, temperature probe, and the optional storage cabinet the range sat on. The only thing it didn't have was the rotisserie option. Surprisingly, I don't remember what kind of gas range she had before. The only range I remeber my Maternal Grandmother having was a Frigidaire 40" range, white, with the Deep Well cooker, a warming drawer on the left and oven on the right. The oven still used open coil heating elements. That range came with us through 4 moves.