Thank you for your compliments.
Those model numbers I assigned to the weird BOL's were just guesses and were wrong. Because of the black panels and the controls I thought Drew's dryer was produced in 1962, where, in fact, it's a 1964 model that's using old parts. I still don't know whether the washer existed or not, but I'm going with the camp that thinks they did.
The model Number Drew gave us for the real dryer that he saved is: 1DA-516YW which breaks down to...
1= it was made in Louisville, KY
DA=it's a GE automatic dryer(which are all electric at this point; later on we get DDE {for electric} and DDG {for gas}).
516=it's a step down from the retail catalogue BOL, which was a 520, but it's much higher in features than "Nail-Down" models.
Y=1964
W=it's white
Most 1964 pairs looked like this (did GE steal Frigidaire's panel design, or did Frigidaire steal from GE?):

Those model numbers I assigned to the weird BOL's were just guesses and were wrong. Because of the black panels and the controls I thought Drew's dryer was produced in 1962, where, in fact, it's a 1964 model that's using old parts. I still don't know whether the washer existed or not, but I'm going with the camp that thinks they did.
The model Number Drew gave us for the real dryer that he saved is: 1DA-516YW which breaks down to...
1= it was made in Louisville, KY
DA=it's a GE automatic dryer(which are all electric at this point; later on we get DDE {for electric} and DDG {for gas}).
516=it's a step down from the retail catalogue BOL, which was a 520, but it's much higher in features than "Nail-Down" models.
Y=1964
W=it's white
Most 1964 pairs looked like this (did GE steal Frigidaire's panel design, or did Frigidaire steal from GE?):
