Something different came thru The Pile today. GE Combo action!

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redcarpetdrew

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Joined
Apr 12, 2008
Messages
3,751
Location
Fairfield, CA
A GE combination refrigerator showed up today. INTACT! Here are a few pictures after a quick wipedown (and removal of a TON of stickers of all sorts as it was a garage unit...) but before a serious cleaning and paint restoration.

Any idea on age?
BH12PG1
RP691083

redcarpetdrew++5-22-2010-23-32-43.jpg
 
A closer look at the shelving... The Chrome is in remarkable shape inside and out as is the aluminum shelves and porcelin liner. This will be a fun one to clean up as it works just fine. I was surprised to see the inner breaker panels intact and not broken out.

RCD

redcarpetdrew++5-22-2010-23-41-7.jpg
 
Very nice!
I grew up with the version of the combination after this? I would assume it was after this model. I don't know for sure.
The difference was ours being "frost-less". The shelves were the same in the fridge part. It had the coils at the top of the fridge. I loved those on humid days. The freezer was different as it had the fan on the left side of the freezer with the coils in back of the fan.
It was a great fridge. I would say it lasted for more than 40 years. When my parents bought a new Whirlpool Side by Side from Woolco they put this GE in the laundry room for extra.
There was nothing wrong with it when they got rid of it. We just moved and my parents did not want to take it with us.
You found a very wonderful refrigerator!
Great find!
Brent
 
Oh....
Another thought.....
My mom has talked about this GE Refrigerator for year as how wonderful it kept Vegetables & Greens. She said it would keep them for almost 30 days without a hint of aging.
She still talks about it.
Brent
 
Ooh Drew!

That is very nice. Perhaps GE did their sheer look about the same time as Frigidaire/GM; 1957? I'm sure the rounded interior
is pre 1960. What a great find! What are the "breaker" panels?
 
Breaker panels are what I call the plastic trim panels that span the gap between the cabinet and the inside liner that hides the insulation, etc. Usually broken by all sorts of things like dropped glass jars, frozen turkeys and even children trying to reach things on top... They can be glued but never quite look right again...

I can't believe all the lights this machine has. It could be defrosted just by opening the door for a few minutes... LOL!

RCD
 
Drew,
I think that's a 1957 (BH-12P). GE's literature says:
"A separately insulated and refrigerated freezer on top, and an automatic defrosting refrigerator section below. Foot pedal opens the magnetic refrigerator door.
*2 Revolving Shelves, 2 Stationary
*Magnetic Safety Doors
*Automatic defrosting refrigerator section
*Big 74 pound true zero-degree freezer
*Removable, adjustable aluminum door shelves
*3 Mini-cube ice trays
*Fold-away bottle racks
*Butter compartment
*Egg rack
*New corner lighting
*Two porcelain vegatable drawers
*Juice can dispenser, ice cream rack"

By comparison, mine is a 1958.

Lawrence

pulltostart++5-23-2010-11-39-6.jpg
 
Thank you, Lawrence!!!

That is so cool that you had all that. Yours is fantastic looking. Alas, I seem to be missing one rotating shelf. I'm still wowed by the fact that it's still intact and running... I don't 'collect' refrigerators but I kinda like this one.

RCD
 
I'm thinking the 'R' in the serial would then translate over to having been produced (but not necessarily the model year) of '58, but I agree it is probably a '57 model year (see brochure).

Lovely, lovely GE. If my '51 ever dies I would love to replace it with a similar GE Combination to the one you found. I recently saw a '55 GE Combination behind one of the local appliance stores in canary yellow. It was too far gone to be saved, so instead I grabbed the hydrator drawers for storage boxes!

Ben

swestoyz++5-23-2010-12-51-13.jpg
 

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