Does anyone know the date on this film (or did I miss it). It was apparently made before GE started using the series wound motors in some of their models...which operate about 8,000 rpm.
I must admit that I often use my disposer to grind up credit card applications, etc. that I receive in the mail. It's more secure. (Big jobs, of course, are done in a real paper shredder.)
Disposers work great for wet and greasy paper towels that you don't want to put in your trash. I use lots of paper towels and it keeps the bulk down in the trash.
The Maytag is a real workhorse. Like a dummy, I left it in my old house before I sold it. Should have taken it with me and left the buyer with a cheap ISE or something.
Probably the Maytag is my favorite, but it is a very close race with the series wound motor GE models. Their downfall is the noise (like a small vacuum cleaner under your sink). However, they are unequaled (as far as I have found) in speed of grinding pork chop bones, corn cobs and especially fruit pits.
Most other machines I have had have pits bounce around for a while before they grind up. The series GE slices them fast with the Carboloy cutter.
Barry