62,63 or 64 GE Americana Range
Very cool find Justin, what a great Christmas present.
This is the exact range that my former partners Mother had, she got hers in 1964 which was the first year that the Self-Cleaning P-7 oven was available in the Americana Hi-Low ranges. Michael's Mom was always sorry that she was talked into the non-self-cleaning range, the salesman gave her a choice of having a rotisserie or a SCO as the SC Americana did not have a rotisserie in the first SC model.
This range will make a great addition to your patio entertaining, can't wait to see it all setup.
The SensAtemp burner will not harm itself if it does not have a pan on it as the heat from the inner element quickly heats the sensor and shuts the element way down, you may however be able to get the outer rings fairly hot if you had just the Grill button pushed. The sensor did such a good job protecting the Calrod Element that I do not think I have ever seen a failed element on a ST equipped range.
Wow Sandy that GE Refrigeration Center is quite a beast, I can see why few were sold, not only would it have been expensive, but with three compressors running the heat, noise and power consumption would have been significant. Then you have to consider the thing must have weighed about 1000 pounds and having THREE manual defrost freezers to defrost. This was also made in a time period where you could look forward to having all THREE compressors fail within 5-15 years, GE did not fix their compressor problem until about 1963.
The 41" wide GE Americana refrigerator came out around 1965 and continued through about 1968. This refrigerator was completely different from the earlier wall refs and was vastly better in almost every aspect. I currently have four of these GE Americana refs, two white, one Coppertone and a Turquoise one that needs a new home, unlike wall refs everyone of these refs work great with no compressor or other serious problems. By the time these 60s GE Americana's were out they used all foamed-in-place insulation so they did not suffer from wet insulation and rust like the 50s GEs did.