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Tom:

"The range in reply #11 is actually Almond, and is from the late 70's - early 80's.. Canary Yellow was discontinued around '67."

The range in # 11 is Yellow, because it's a 1966 model. Last year without an oven door window on the 40" P*7 large oven, and with the white glass backguard. It's the TOL, with Sensi-Temp, the electric meat thermometer, the rotisserie and the griddle. This particular range seems to have had its Sensi-Temp burner converted to a regular one; this was a common means of dealing with a malfunctioning Sensi-Temp unit. Also, pushbutton burner controls didn't survive into the Almond years on TOL 40" ranges.

The range in # 15 is an Almond range from the late '70s - it has the oven door window on the big P*7 oven, it has woodgrain on the backguard and it lacks convenience outlets, which were dropped in the mid-'70s as a safety measure.[this post was last edited: 12/15/2014-22:25]
 
If It Makes You Feel Any Better....

....Tom, I made a mistake in my post above. '66 was not the last year for the white glass backguard - the '67s also had them. The yellow '67 in the eBay thread about the overpriced Yellow range and fridge has the white glass. '67 was the first year for a windowed oven door on a 40-incher with P*7.

Through my fault, through my fault, through my most grievous fault....
 
1956 General Electric Mid-Century Modern/Vintage/Retro Refr

1956 General Electric Vintage Refrigerator
-Runs perfectly - ice cold!
-Mid-Century Modern
-Family heirloom
-Original finish
-Single-door design with freezer compartment, bottom drawers, egg shelf & multi-shelves in the
door, and adjustable swivle shelves in the main section!
-Very good condition inside and out, has only a few scratches and minor imperfections!

$1400 OBO (serious inquires only please)


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That would be early 60s (maybe 1962ish?) GE 40" in the post #28 directly above... the last iteration of the 1957 model with the dash on legs. Such neat futuristic design!
 
Photo 2 above is my doing...

I'm sorry for inserting one photo above, that was for another stove…too funny, I just noticed.

Jeff - I agree. That is one of the cooler looking stoves that GE designed.
 
Vintage Mid Century GE Stove Range P7 Works Perfectly Like

photos are not so great!

AD: " No restoration needed, amazing condition.

GE P7
The first self cleaning oven, started in 1963.
Yellow green, faux wood trim. Brady Bunch vintage feel.
Very Clean, almost new modest use. Stored safely.
Beautiful chrome, new original broiler pan.
30" wide model # J 365001 HT
Made in Louisville NY USA embossed.
Serial # N 2424776

Model dials are different than picture.

Handsome dials, perfect for mid century feel home or vintage look.
Please bring hand truck and two strong people.
Item in basement, used only as a secondary for parties.

Working range and oven.

Appliance outlets on top, likely top model of its day."


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I don't see how a fridge could "freeze up" if it was low on freon. 

 

Thermostats were the weak link on GE's from this period.  I'd wager that's the problem, unless the seller doesn't realize that the freezer isn't frost free and requires periodic defrosting.

 

When the thermostat failed on my '57 top-mount, it wouldn't cycle off.  It just got colder and colder, and the serpentine coil in the refrigerator section developed a thick layer of frost instead of the thin glaze that forms when the cold control is operating properly.

 

If I were you, I'd go after a  GE Combination from 1959 or later with "Frost Guard" if it's going to be your daily driver.  From what I've read here in the past, defrosting those bottom freezers is a task that should be avoided.  Also, the articulated shelves on the Frost Guard models are a superior design to the revolving ones.  I think you'd be much happier with a fridge that looked like the turquoise one a few posts up.  It's worth the wait for one to come up for grabs in your area.
 

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