Who's old enough to remember when THIS was brand new?

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ditto

Raising my right hand now. In 2 weeks I turn the big 5-0.Arrrgggg! No big deal really. Lovely stove, I certainly do remember when it came out and thinking"everybody needs one;E-Z off will choke you trying to clean that way"
 
p-7

Wasnt the p7 available long before the americana editions. I seem to remember p-7 self cleaning in the 60's. I always thought the "Americana edition" was GE marketing at its best, during the Nations bicentenneial?
 
raise your hand

David: turing 50 isn't so bad...happened to me in June.

GE P-7 cleaning was available in the sixties...and with GE, you could leave the oven racks in while cleaning. But...believe it or not, Sears proclaimed sometime in the 90's that they were INTRODUCING racks that could be left in their ovens during the self-cleaning cycle....
 
To the best of my recollection--

GE introduced the P-7 self cleaning system in 1964.

I was just getting into washers then.

By the time I started into stoves and learning to cook, it was 1967, and self cleaning was still less common.

As for "Americana," I remember that designation for GE's upper end cooking from '65 on.

Lawrence/Maytagbear
 
I remember those stoves roo, my aunt in Maine had one just like that. When she and her late husband were building their new home she put one in. SHe just replaced it about a year ago, my mom told me. She told us that it did get very hot on the outside when you cleaned it. When I bought my house in 1984 there was a Ge electric range that said P7 self cleaning on it. It was soooo dirty when we moved in I think the owners never cleaned it. It was so disgusting when I opened it but after one 3 hour cleaning cycle it was spotless. I left the racks in because I did not care if they discolored. A few years later we bought a new GE range and it did not clean as well as the old one. Last year we had to get a new one again and I got the Profile with the porcelain coated oven racks that GE says you can self clean them, This one I feel self cleans ok but not as well as the first one in this house. I found that the window does not get cleaned very well.
 
I raise my paw.

Americana was also for washers, dryers, and fridges. I'm sure there was a dishwasher too.

Hey Chuck, you're only 4 days older than me!!
 
Great range!

Well, I'm definitely old enough to remember the GE P7, but never saw one. Believe me, I would have remembered all that stainless!

I don't think the windows in any of the self-cleaning models ever really get clean. It's almost as if there is residue between the glass. I'm also glad to see that they are now coating the racks so that they can be self-cleaned as well. It's a pain to have to take them out every time you clean the oven.

Was that a range hood above the upper oven?
 
The initials "P7" were coined because in 1964 the cost of the electricity needed to run the ovens through the pyrolitic self cleaning mode were 7 cents per killowatt hour.Frigidaire called theirs "Electriclean".The original GE/Hotpoint/Penncrest self cleaning oven ranges had a shield inbetween the double window on the oven door you had to pull up and lock before cleaning.it was lined with asbestus!!!!
 
I'm raising my hand and I owned one...

I'm more than old enough to remember (lol). I think mine was an Americana (harvest gold) which I bought brand new in 1974. It was the first stove I ever bought and also the best and most favorite stove which I have ever owned. Two great ovens, the upper one had a rotisserie. The side and bottom panels in the top oven were removable and placed in the bottom oven for cleaning. It did a fantastic job cooking and cleaning. Mine also had the vent hood. Unfortunately when we remodeled in the early 80's the harvest gold went away....I'm sorry I ever got rid of it! My aunt had one in coppertone that they put in their brand new house that they built in 1965. It was not self cleaning but she had it about 30 years.

Rich
 
Also raising my hand here!

My aunt in Miami had one in Avocado.

Her's was a later model. I say that bacause it had dials instead of pushbuttons to operating the "burners". The dials were located next to the upper oven.

I would imagine that the pushbuttons next to the "burners" reduced the size of the cooktop. I would also imagine that they were grease catchers and were very hard to clean. That being said, however, pushbutton controled GE and Hotpoints are my all time favorite stove design. (I'm still slightly annoyed at a friend who just replaced a prefectly good pushbutton coppertone Hotpoint with a Sears. The reason -- the Hotpoint wasn't self cleaning!)

Mike

P.S. It's a little scary to think that the "pull up" window sheild, which I also vividly remember, was made of asbestos!
 
I don't know how old the one in the ad is, I would expect around 1965, judging by the woman's suit, which I really like, so I was very young, but around. They are a favorite of mine. GE would probably be my second range choice besides a (GM) Frigidaire.

GE made these for years, in fact they may have even extended into the 80s. Some later ones had a microwave on top instead of another oven, but I'd rather have the extra oven. A neighbor had an avacado green one with that had the small buttons up near the upper oven to control the burners.
 
These are beautiful, I'd bring one home in a minute! The house where I found my Maytag wringer washer and a mint 806 dryer had a GE model just like this in turquoise. I tried to wriggle it out of them but the house had just sold with the range in it so there was nothing they could do but give the new owners my name & number.

My aunt had a Hotpoint model with the microwave above and a self cleaning oven. Since hers was the first self-clean in the family (in 1979!) the "women" tried it out with a mess they half created with a cherry pie. It worked beautifully, of course.
 
We had this exact model in coppertone as shown

I grew up with this exact stove in Buffalo, NY. We lived in that house from 65-73. There is a white version of this model in the Henry Ford museum.

I remember my mother using the rotisserie from time to time.
The kitchen also had a GE diswhasher, GE refigerator with foot pedal to open the roll to you freezer (no auto fill ice-maker like the Americana I have now). We also had a GE console stereo and GE 1050X Washer and matching dryer.

I have a very similar GE console and am still hunting the washer/dryer.

MK in LBC
 
Americana name

Americana was used on GE's TOL appliances beginning in the early 60's. It had nothing to do with the bicentennial, which was still over a decade away.

Our house was new in 65 and had this stove in it. The earliest Americana ad in my collection is from 1963.

MK in LBC
 

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