Ge Pushbutton BOL?

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sarahperdue

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This GE push button stove does not have a clock. I'm guessing it's a BOL model. What are your thoughts on performance?

 

I'm looking for an inexpensive, reliable, analog stove for a friend. It doesn't need a clock.

 

Sarah


sarahperdue-2023040813271900678_1.jpg
 
Speaking of apartments, that is the exact stove I had in my first late 60s built apt. Same color and everything.
This along with a basic hg GE rangehood, and a basic 2 door, manual defrost hg refrig. No dw. dark wood laminate flat panel cabinets with awful hardware.

IMO- it's over 50 years old and still going apparently. With a simple wipe down and perhaps some new burner drip pans it's probably good to go another 50.

Stoves (electric) tend to last and last. Typically they have no moving parts and are only turned on occasionally compared to a refrigerator that is running (theoretically) all the time.
 
It does have one higher wattage 6 inch element on the left front which is nice because it has the inner winding that heats on 2 and Lo for smaller diameter pans while the two rear 6 inch elements give distribution of the heat on all settings. The main thing I would be sure the range offers is two oven racks. Some bol ranges only offered one.
 
I had that exact same range & color when renting a brand new apartment August 1976, my last year before grauating. It had 2 oven racks. It was a large complex and the kitchens were either harvest gold, avocado, or white.
 
Basic GE 30 inch range

Hi Sarah, this could be a good range for somebody who doesn’t mind cleaning the oven manually and doesn’t have any little kids around us. The front of the oven door gets pretty hot on these non-self cleaning oven’s due to the poor insulation

That said you could do a lot of cooking on this range it does everything it needs to do cooking wise.

John.
 
GE made that basic model for many years. I've seen them in White, Turquoise, Petal Pink, Canary Yellow, Woodtone Brown, Shaded Coppertone, Avocado, and Harvest Gold. I think they did a redesign before Almond arrived. There was also a basic P*7 model, which had a clock, of course, but otherwise the same.
 
GE made a basic self cleaning range

That did not even have a clock or a timer for the self clean cycle, you merely turned it on to clean and tried to remember to turn it off a few hours later.

This is why I’ve told people for the past 40 years if the clock doesn’t work, you can still use the self clean cycle on your oven. Just remember to turn it off after a while.

Do any of you guys have a picture of this basic 30 inch range without a timer or clock?

John.
 
Sarah, that surface unit is only 1325 or 1425 watts on 230 volts and something like 1600 on 250 volts. It is not a speed heat unit like was offered on Frigidaire, Westinghouse and other ranges with thicker surface units. GE and Hotpoint's thinner Calrod elements were fast enough without the Frankenstein circuitry shifting between 240 and 120 volts.
 

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