Just Brought Home from Connersville, IN - 1952 American Kitchens Electric Sink

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dishwashercrazy

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 22, 2008
Messages
941
Location
West Peoria, IL
(With apologies for the verboseness of this introduction)

Today was perhaps the second most thrilling day for me since I started collecting Vintage Dishwashers just 20 months ago in July 2008! (The MOST thrilling day was April 29, 2009 when I traveled to Massachusetts and picked up both the brand new, never used, 1949 G.E. Electric Sink and the 1950 Sears Homart Electric.)

First, however, I would again like to acknowledge aw.org member Wes (elginkid) from Cincinnati. He found the Ebay listing for the “American Kitchen Sink Dishwasher Cabinets Connersville!
Cabinets by American Kitchen Company Connersville, IN”. The auction began on January 22 and ended on February 1, 2010. He created discussion thread #26662. Thanks also go to Pete (rollermatic) who emailed me directly to bring this Electric Sink to my attention. As I mentioned in #26662, Wes and I collaborated on this purchase and he graciously deferring this acquisition to me. I’m calling this a 1952 Electric Sink because of a 1952 magazine ad that I just found on ebay – showing virtually the same machine with red roto-rack.

A Midwest snowstorm on February 4th scrapped my plans to drive from Peoria over to Connersville on the 5th. Subsequent nasty and cold weather, plus other personal commitments and health issues have prevented me from making the trip until today. Departing from Peoria about 4:30am, I arrived in Connersville 4 hours 45 minutes later. I met the seller, Jacob, and we led me the short distance to a garage where the Sink and 3 other cabinets were stored. We transferred the set over to my pickup truck. Jacob had told me there was another gentleman, local historian for lack of a better description, who had some information to share with me regarding the American Kitchens company. Turns out he was a former American Kitchens employee - who has factory photographs, historic documents, brochures, and a whole array of other memorabilia that he managed to save from being trashed, some documents dating back to 1905 for the Central Manufacturing Company.

But most astonishing to me – he has a blue ink carbon copy of a “Proposal for Manufacturing of Electric Dishwasher – American Central Division –AVCO Manufacturing Corporation – submitted by F.F. Dugan January 1951” Dugan was an Engineer, likely employed originally by the Rex company, and hired by Sam Regenstrief. American Kitchens was already making Electric Sinks, and the fact that most dishwashers of the time were incorporated into to Sink cabinets, led American Kitchen dealers and distributors to begin exerting pressure urging the company to start including stand-alone dishwashers in their product line. This study would eventually lead to D&M building rebadged dishwashers for the other various appliance companies.

The point to all of this – is that I’ve asked the gentleman for a copy of this historic document in hopes of being able to pass its contents on to the club. And I hope he will make copies of some of the other documents that were in his archives as well.

Following are some photos of the Electric sink that I brought back. Jacob said that the dishwasher was in working order when they took the Electric Sink out. He said that the faucet was dripping, and that replacement parts were no longer available. One thing led to another, and they ended up doing a kitchen renovation. The inside of the dishwasher is in pristine condition, leading me to believe it has not been used much, if at all.

Enjoy.
Mike

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More photos showing the very bad condition of the sink bowl. I don't quite know what happened in there. The whole cabinet has been painted.

The dial shows a wash, two rinses and dry.

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WOW!

Geez Mike, you did it again!! What a great dishwasher!! I think you may now have one (if not THE) last of the original roto-tray dishwashers!!
Is this model a gravity drain?
It looks as if the sink got used WAY more than the dishwasher. You should be able to refinish it, though. They sell a special two-part enamel for sinks and bathtubs in paint stores and this should work.
For the faucet, like dishwasher pumps, you should be able to adapt current parts to it. Had to do some o-ring acrobatics to get the original GE Kitchen Center faucet to stop dripping, but it's possible...
Thank you so much for the photos!! So, can I come visit again this summer?? LOL
 
What a great find Mike!
The dishwasher looks hardly used.
Looks like it weighs a ton!
Thanks for the pictures and the history!
Brent
 
wowza

I know it's heresy, but I've never been a dishwasher guy. But this, now this! It is breath taking. I'll bet that sink will clean up beautifully, too. So, Mike, when's the next invite to Peoria? :-)
 
Those were great dishwashers as far as impeller types go. It would really spin that top rack! You could yank open the door mid-cycle and that top rack would be spinning so fast it would sling hot water half-way across the kitchen!
Kool find!
 
Hey Mike, very happy to see you were able to make it over to Connersville to pick up this set. Looks to be in great shape with the exception of the sink bowl; maybe some Bar Keepers Friend will help with that. The eye doctor's office I went to as a kid was in an old house, and it had the complete American Kitchens set, with double sink and that same dishwasher. I remember that unusual faucet on the sink. Do you think the cabinet handles are original or replacements? Seems like the ones at the Dr.'s office, and the ones in a friend's AK kitchen, were round chrome and plastic. As for repairing the faucet, Noel's Plumbing in Cincinnati (513-721-5286)claims they have parts for American Kitchens products. Their website is www.noelsplumbingsupply.com.
 
Mike that is a fantastic find !
Love the color coded dial and the interior of the machine never saw one ever.
I'm glad everything worked out .
Mike did you ever find out about the Briva dishwasher from Kitchenaid ?

Darren k.
 
mike that is a beautiful

dishwasher. in some ways it looks exactly like the d&m modern maid i have but in other ways it is very different.

the tub, especially the sump area is in much better shape than mine! your's looks brand new! and i notice your's has a definate sump area where as the one i have just has a slanted tub bottom. the motor on your's is different looking from the one i have also (see pic) and from what i can tell the drain pumps are not the same.

love the red racks on your machine! they really stand out!
glad to hear you have an extra impeller if you need it, i do too. larry in parma sold me one last year, he may have more left. i also got one from mark michaels last fall.

mine leaks around the door on occasion too, bet your's will not! your machine seems almost never used!

i'm curious as to which one of our's is the later model? i'm not sure when mine was built.

it couldn't have gone to a better home. you are the electric sink king!

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Sink Cleaning:

My friend, you need Zud!

Zud is the "heavy artillery" Ben was speaking of; it's a powdered cleanser with a rust and metal stain remover chemical built into it. It's in many better grocery stores, hardware stores, and places like Menard's. It will remove both rust and green/blue copper stains.

It shouldn't be used for regular cleaning; it's pretty abrasive if you rub hard. What I'd do with your sink is to wet it, sprinkle on a goodly amount of Zud, rub gently, and wait, letting the chemical do as much of the work as possible. Rinse, assess, repeat if needed. Once you have the sink clean, you can use Bon Ami, which will actually polish the sink a bit over time. Bon Ami has a "melting" abrasive called feldspar in it, so it does not scratch, but it will smooth a rough sink a little bit if used regularly.

Anyway, you need Zud. It'll bring that thing up to as good a condition as is possible.
 
I think I've found the reason why this dishwasher looks

Just a brief update with more to follow.

Because of my past experience with the G.E. and Homart Dishwasher Dole Brand Brass Water Valves, I decided to proactively go ahead and remove the water valve on this American Kitchens. I'm glad I did, because if I had just hooked up a water hose to it and started it up, I would have had water all over the floor.

As you can see in these photos, there is significant warping that has occurred to the plate that houses the water filter, and also all four sides of the flange from the solenoid shaft (red oval). Now whether this occurred just this winter when the machine was stored in the garage awaiting the ebay sale and pickup, or maybe it occurred many years ago - I'll never know.

What I do know is that there was significant rust, dirt, sediment, etc. in the water line, as evidenced by the galvanized water pipe and water filter. My guess is that this water filter got plugged up a long time ago. Dishwasher performance degraded to the point where they just stopped using it. And there it has sat all of these years. Who knows what the real story is.

I've tried straightening these warped components but so far have failed the water test for the valve itself. Therefore, it's going to get a generic GE Water Valve for now.

I'm planning a Water Test on Saturday. I'll post more and respond to questions and comments, posted above, at that time.

Mike

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