Frigidaire Touch-n-cook Stove Oven, GM

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I bought this range New in 1975 and loved every moment I owned it. Learning to stir in square corningware sauce pans and not send it shooting out the corner like a fluke, not so much.
 
That's right Patrick! 

 

It's the first time I see one for sale! We didn't get these in Canada (the nicest ones we got then were the self-cleaning Custom Deluxe Cermatop with regular controls).

 

I wish the asking price was a bit less (and I wonder how much it would cost to have it shipped in upper NY state or Vermont!).

 

 
 
Touch Controls:

It seems at least possible that Amana might have made the touch controls for Frigidaire; Amana supplied them with microwave ovens for a while. And the controls have the Touchmatic "look." The Frigidaire RCM-10 microwave was "their" version of the Touchmatic.
 
I might be wrong as I wasn't around when this happened but Frigidaire introduced the Touch-N-Cook ranges in 1973 before Amana introduced their Touchmatic microwaves (about two years later). They do look similar and they both use touch-sensitive glass panels but I don't know how closely they're related. I think the circuits for Frigidaire Touch-N-Cook ranges were made by American Micro-Systems while those on Amana microwave ovens are made by Texas Instruments.

Amana did supply Frigidaire their later Touch-N-Cook RCM-9 and RCM-10 microwaves which shared their internals with Amana Touchmatic microwaves. The fonts of the numbers on the Frigidaire Touch-N-Cook Microwave panels matched those of other Frigidaire Touch-N-Cook ranges, ovens and cooktops while Amana had slightly different, more rounded numbers on theirs.

Cory or Ben could probably tell more about that...
 
It almost seems to be coppertone on the pic above but I think it's Poppy.

By then, Frigidaire had the much darker "Colonial Copper" which was more dark brown than copper... When they removed the shading on the edges in the late seventies, they renamed this color "Coffee" (and "Poppy" was renamed "Terra Cotta").
 

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