unique concept
I think Modern Maid overestimated the need for a compact unit. The theory is good, a space-saving unit for small kitchens and apartments, but in practice they didn't seem to stay in production for many years.
The dishwasher is almost the same as my family's, which my dad purchased in the summer if 1968, just a small cosmetic difference on the control panel and door panels. I remember seeing the dishwasher/range combo unit at the store and thinking it looked strange. As far as washability, the dishwasher scrubbed quite well, to the point it eventually stripped off most of the Teflon on my mom's pans. It scrubbed pots and pans and dirty dishes quite well.
The downside was the noise. My dad didn't like the noise, it didn't bother my mom at all, she stated she was proud to have the noise as it let everyone know she had a dishwasher.
The other downside was the redeposition of the small particles created by the "macerator blade." They sometimes accumulated in the concave area on tops of the bottoms of cups and glassware. My sister's same vintage D&M made Kenmore roto-rack, was virtually the same machine with a different top rack, oddly, didn't have this problem. Leading me to assume the centrifugal force flung the small particles off the cups and glasses, as the rack spun.
Those era D&M machines were prone to rust through.
My dad purchased our Modern Maid from Wickes Lumber. Anyone else remember Wickes? It was an early version of Menards, Home Depot and Lowe's. One of the earliest supermarket type lumber/home store. Quite an exciting place to shop, sort of a hardware store on steroids.
If I recall properly, Modern Maid was the only line of appliances Wickes carried. My dad shopped around and there was no cheaper dishwasher he could find than the Modern Maid. He never thought to check Consumer Reports or ask aquaintainces about their dishwasher experiences. He just went solely on the cheapest thing he could find.
But, the Modern Maid did work and cleaned dishes well save for nibblet accumulation on cups and glasses that sometimes occured. Longevity apparently was not a great consideration to the people at D&M, though, ours had rust-through in only five years and also had a motor burnout and replacement in that time period as well.