Who Made This?

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support :

pulltostart

Well-known member
Platinum Member
Joined
Sep 9, 2004
Messages
5,870
Location
A Red State
Decent-looking slide-in electric range. The seller says its a Magic Chef, but I don't see any logo or name on the panel; only a reference to "continuous cleaning". I always thought of MC as BOL appliances, but this range appears to have 4 high-speed eyes (not usually found on BOL ranges). Who actually built this range?

lawrence


pulltostart++11-20-2012-08-10-19.jpg
 
This looks very similar to an avocado model we had growing up, which nobody can seem to remember the name of. It was electric, with the horizontal clock in the center just like this. Did Scoville ever end up with their name on any ranges? -Cory
 
Looks like Magic Chef

I guess in the case of this stove, " the eyes have it"! I have never heard of the term "eyes" describing burners before. It must have been in a terrible fight, as it has 4 black eyes.! Sorry, I just couldn't resist. LOL I wonder if the heaters in the oven, are forced air, or maybe steam radiators! Where do people come up with this stuff!
David
 
"Eyes"

Is a Southern term for "burners," heard more among older and rural people.

And it's pronounced "ahs," as in "I got me a new Westin'house frigidaire* and a new 'lectric cookstove with four ahs."

* To this day, "Frigidaire" remains a rural Deep South locution referring to any refrigerator, of any brand. It's especially fun to hear when it's applied to a shiny stainless LG french-door model in a McMansion; you know where the speaker's roots are, no matter how high off the hog they're living today. [this post was last edited: 11/20/2012-17:50]
 
That is ALL I ever heard them called as a kid!!!

Me too. Ha, maybe its because we have so few gas ranges, the term "burner" doesn't seem right.

In my family, the term older people used for refrigerator was "icebox," though. This despite the fact that my mom says they did get a Frigidaire (a real one) about 1930 or so.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top