In the ads for this appliance, they used to show it turning out Baked Alaska, high elegance at the time. This appliance had some versatility with the ability to bake or broil although, with no insulation, it was best used outdoors during hot weather. The appliance that replaced it, GE's Rotisserie Broiler was the apotheosis of modern design with clean straight lines and square edges. It had a partial glass door on the front that, when closed, left an air gap of about an inch at the top and bottom so that foods being broiled or rotated had cooler air circulating around them so that the cooking was more by radiant heat than less desirable steamy baking, but the bake function was lost forever.
Once you start looking at this earlier beauty, you can see that it did not have heavy use. Cleaning it was not a fun thing. The chrome plated back of the oven must never be scoured or you will put scratches in it that will be on full display through the picture window.
This is about the last grand hurrah for the era of the big infra red rotisserie-broilers of the 40s through mid 50s from brands like Black Angus & Roto-Broil. Most broiling, but not rotisserie cooking, on 115 volts limited the ratio of food to quality results (high heat over a small area) vs. (lower heat over larger area). Cleaning these monsters was a job with all of their sharp edges, seams and cracks. The trend went in favor of broilers like the Farberware Open Hearth Broiler/Rotisseries which Consumer Reports loved.
If anyone has one of the Farber Broilers, you know that most of the drippings fall through to the pan underneath. If you want a bit of the taste of of charcoal grilling, find one of the half sections of the JennAire flat ceramic rock that went under the element in the grill module. I just set it in the shell of the broiler before putting in the element. While the process remains essentially smokeless with lean pieces of flesh, enough drips sizzle on the rocks to give a slight essence of the wonderful, carcinogenic flavor of foods grilled over charcoal's high heat. After use, the ceramic rock goes in the dishwasher with the rest of the soiled parts for easy cleaning.