Where's the built-in obsolesence when you need it?
My Uncle and his partner had this L&H oven that was part of an early Fifties kitchen. There were also two L&H twin thick coil burner cooktops and one of those early Fifties GE refrigerator/freezers with the semi-circular metal shelves that revolved outwards. The kitchen also sported pink gingham pattern formica countertops with the steel trim. They demolished that old kitchen in the early Seventies and built a new kitchen on the ground floor, keeping one of the L&H cooktops (that they used all the time because they got tired of the new Corning Stove's flat SLOWcooking surfaces VERY quickly {but, aesthetically, it was one of the most beautiful electric ranges I've ever seen and it had a very fast GM Frigidaire oven}) and the L&H built in oven. The L&H cooktop and the Corning Range both lasted until the house was sold in 2012; the L&H oven lasted until 1998.
Thanks John. I thought it was a Thermador until I saw the picture I posted above. I agree about the (likely millennial) sellers thinking it doesn't work well. I think that's probably because it's not a microwave oven.
This would be a great item for anyone looking to outfit a retro kitchen, and you can't beat the price. In greater L.A., it would be snapped up quickly. Maybe some Oakland hipster will save it.