POD - General Electirc washer - What vintage is it

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I think it was made in about 1964. It was a very short lived model for some reason, which is unfortunate since it is very stylish. This came right after the ones with the raised control panels, and before the ubiquitous timer dial and toggleswitch configuration that was used for 25 years or more.
 
This model was made in small various forms from 1964 to 1966. It was the TOL and the continuation of GE's "programmed" washers. It went from 5 cycle buttons, eventually to 7 selections and was the prototype of the programmed washer TOL that was featured from 1968 through to 1972. It was GE's answer to CU's constant carping about raised panel machines. Unfortunately it took GE(and many other manufacturers) many more years to figure out that a lit control panel than shined light in the user's eyes wasn't as practical as a light that illuminated the controls on the panel itself.

In 1965 it was the WA-1250Y with 5 selections:

8-5-2007-12-14-12--bajaespuma.jpg
 
...at any rate, they were great classic models, and I will never understand GE's need, back then, to change their designs so frequently. I'd love to meet someone who used to work at GE and isn't terrified of the corporate heads who could explain the philosophy.
 
The V12 to V14 claim may have been due to those extra 2 lbs. that you could mini-basket wash. Of course, if that was their illogical logic,it's silly,since those extra 2 lbs. would be done separately anyhow.
 
I had no idea these were around even that long. Apparently they overlapped with the "new" toggleswitch and dial design, which I'm pretty sure came out in about 1964 as well.
 
Thanks for all the replys!

Sure are neat machines (and from the year of my birth, along with the IBM System/360 and RPG programming language!)
 
Yup

The "new" toggleswitch and dial machines did debut in 1964 and, as many know, they lasted well into the 1990's. Pity that GE went to black and white and never dabbled in the riotous colors of the late fifties.

8-5-2007-17-02-34--bajaespuma.jpg
 
Thanks for the scans! I had thought there were some that had the light on the bottom instead of the top, though I'd never seen one in person.
 
In the early 80s my grand mother had a used 950 washer and an 850 dryer in electric. I remember looking at them and thinking how strange it was that the lights weren't in the same place. And yes, they could be blinding.

My first official washer (when I was 14?)was one that was avacodo that was a few years newer than these that had an incandescent nightlight bulb under the console hood. This served to light the edge of a piece of plexiglass which encircled the timer knob. It was more practical in that you could actually see the lettering clearer when choosing a cycle. It also had a sudsaver. Then I found the exact same model only in white. And that became "my" washer. Back then I frowned upon Avacodo and Coffee and even Harvest gold (even though I secretly liked it). Shame on me. lol. I never came upon any pink though. Not until recently anyway.

It seems in the early 60s GE did alot experimenting with different appliance designs. Just looking at the museum you find the all in one washer, the washer sink, and then this with the electro-mechanical timer. Then you add in the wall refrigerator, the hutch refrigerator(huge), and things like the stove I found a couple weeks back with the unit buttons on the sides(where they could easily be dripped on or activated).
They must have realized they were going to be major players going forward so why not get things right and see what people preferred.

Thanks for posting the adverts.

SOOO cool.
 
Washertalk, how does the suds saver work on a GE? Is it like a Sears or Maytag, where it agitates as the water pumps in, or a different system. I know various manufacturers had different ways of doing it.
 
A neighbor of ours had the 850 set with the lights on top. That was my first exposure to GE laundry appliances and I remember the lights and the mini basket and the foot pedal for the dryer door and thought it was all quite cool. For some reason I never found out, she only had the washer til about 1970 then got a Lady Kenmore. Her kids, who were quite young at the time had a tendency to play with stuff at theirs and other people's houses, so maybe they broke the speed selector one too many times or something. She had the GE dryer for at least 25 years that I know of.

It was fun that Mike has that set and that I got to see them again!
 
Welch squelch

I used to work for GE during Jack Welch's tenure (I think Welch was and is the inspiration for the Simpson's Montgomery Burns; evil man). From what I learned while working there, GE's divisions had a lot more autonomy before Welch, which may be why they had the latitude to spend big bucks changing designs and trying new innovative designs for their appliances. When Welch came in and started cutting heads left and right, he squelched a lot of creativity in "homier products" in favor of hard engineering science and uber economics. Housewares and white goods just weren't big earners. Nothing like a good cheap nuclear warhead to make your stockholders happy. Sieg Heil America!!!!! Pecuniam macht frei!!!
 

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