What's good about it is that it still has the square CLEAR window and not the round, pebble-textured glass which makes a good baking dish but was sh*t for visibility. Who needs privacy glass on a laundry appliance? The bad thing is that parts are mostly non-existant.
You would want to have something in which to spin the clothes before letting them go through the dry cycle. The combo's alternative to a "wash only" button was a button labeled "Drip Dry" and they were very literal in the labeling; you can squeeze water out of things after the "gentle low speed spins." That's GE's terminology. If you hang things out to dry, you can watch the water drip out of them for a long time and they will dry with an unusual stiffness.
You also want to have a well, or other source of cheap, steadily cold water. The machine will use about 30 gallons of cold water during the dry cycle, maybe closer to 20 if you spin the load in a regular washer before drying. If your ground water warms up during the warmer months, the condensing efficiency drops way off.