G.E. Three Beater MIxer,W. Paul ( Turquoisedude )

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aldspinboy

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Joined
Sep 11, 2007
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Location
Philadelphia, Pa
I had and opportunity to go to Cannada and shared the trip in ...
As the Tub turns.
I thought I will bring to the and share the rest in the main forms.
Paul & Mike ( Dishwashercrazy ) and me had a great time last summer.
Here is the second day at Pauls Where I had him tell me about the dinner he served in french.
He pulled out the GE mixer with three beaters and a LIGHT.
I never seen one and thought if you guy's have one or saw one.
Plus it was fun to watch.
Dinner was Pork kaboobs , Saled , and Pan fried Pinapple upside down cake.
And here is Paul.

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Here he is with the three beater mixing .
Just a little accident with spatula but who has not done that.
This will go into a GE electric pan.

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Pouring batter and me wanting some.
My aunt would never let me lick the bowel never understood that.
Well she said that she needed all the batter for the cake.
I thought she was mean I did at least get a table spoon full.
Now if you do it salmenalla is the thing now ?
I guees I spelled that right lol.
Great times with Paul.
Darren k

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That is the second version of GE's famous Triple Whip Mi

It was made between 1950 and circa 1956. From circa 1954 to about 1956 this mixer had a white control dial instead of a gray one. The original version of this mixer had a vertical motor instead of a horizontal one and was made from circa 1939 to 1949 and like the horizontal motor versions had a built in light that came on when ever the mixer was running that illuminated the bowl and it's contents. My guess is the light was provided in case your used the mixer in a darker area of your kitchen.....PAT COFFEY[this post was last edited: 7/14/2012-13:15]
 
Wow Pat thanks for the info !
Mixing in a dark area that is weird to me.
Here is the complete dinner.

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Versions of GE's 3 beater mixer

GE made two versions of their vertical and two versions of their horizontal triple whip mixers and discontinued the design in 1956. All of the mixers utilized three beaters, a light shining to see what is being mixed when the motor was running, and the same white glass 2 and 4 quart bowls. The first vertical motor design (M 5) had metal trim that bisected the front of the mixer motor and had beaters with a center shaft the entire length of the beater and somewhat rounded shape where the beater blades came out from the shaft. All subequent GE mixers had a shaftless design until they debuted their Powermaster series in the late 1970s which mimiced Sunbeams "bowl-fit" beater design. Some people felt the shaftless designed allowed more gentle folding and were easier to scrape cleaner with a rubber spatula. These beaters also had a more square contour as well and the shaft was kurled to make the tugging of beaters out the mixer easier. None of the vertical and the first horizontal mixer motors had no beater release or ejector mechanism. The speed control of the vertical motors used the "adjustable brush" method of speed control. GE's horozontal triple whip mixers utilized a governor to improve mixer performance at low speeds. The earliest horizontal models M 7 had no mixing guide printed on the mixer and a grey speed selector on/off knob. Later models had a speed guided added suggesting what foods could be mixed at a given numerical speed setting. The last triple whip model (M 8) a white speed control knob and to eject the beater the user turned the knob to the left past the off position and a mechanism pushed the beaters out of their retaining sockets. There were attachments such as citrus juicer, speed reduction unit to accept a food chopper/grinder, grater, knife sharpener, silver polisher and drink mixer that fit all the models. There were two variations of the citrus juicer, one having a glass juicer bowl that sat atop a metal support that was attached to the mixer. The second juicer design had an all plastic bowl with a built in strainer.
 
Would Kelly Like This Mixer?

I loved the design, concept and look of GE mixers from the 50's.  The vertical GE Triple Whips didn't have much power and without a governor would race and stall depending on thickness of batter.  The horizonatals were quieter, fit the stand better and didn't torque to the side like the verticals.  Governor controlled models had more power.  The M8 was significantly beefier in design and power and are wonderful mixers.  Triple Whips would go a long way to end a "lot of lick the bowl and beater wars" in a family with multiple children.  The M8 with a double batch of cookies.

[this post was last edited: 7/15/2012-01:01]

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