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The 5513 is the long-run no-date Submariner and one of the broadest vintage Rolex references to cover under one number. It starts in the early crown-guard gilt era, moves through the long matte-dial years, and finishes with late gloss dials that still sit in an acrylic case. Twenty-seven continuous years of production. No other Submariner reference comes close.
{{#seo:
|title=Rolex 5513 Submariner — Production, Dial Variants, Serial Ranges | BezelBase
|description=Rolex 5513 reference guide covering production from about 1962 to 1990, dial eras from gilt to matte to late gloss, movement fitment, bracelet fitment, and the main originality traps.
|keywords=Rolex, 5513, Submariner, specifications, reference guide
|image=Ref 5513 dial-detail 2.webp
|image_alt=Late gloss 5513
|type=article
|og_type=article
|published_time=2026-04-14T15:49:40Z
|modified_time=2026-04-29T02:49:43Z
|robots=index,follow,max-image-preview:large
}}


==Core facts==
<small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] -> '''5513'''</small>
 
The 5513 is the long-run no-date Submariner, the cheaper non-chronometer partner to the 5512, produced from about 1962 to 1989/1990 across twenty-seven continuous years. Early watches are gloss gilt, most of the run is matte, and the final years return to gloss with white-gold surrounds.
 
<span id="core-facts"></span>
 
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-detail 2.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Late gloss 5513|Late gloss 5513]]
 
== Core facts ==


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
Line 33: Line 52:
|}
|}


==Where it sits in the line==
<span id="where-it-sits-in-the-line"></span>
== Where it sits in the line ==


The 5513 sits next to the 5512, not above it.
The 5513 sits next to the 5512, not above it. The 5512 was the premium no-date chronometer. The 5513 was the cheaper non-chronometer, sold in far greater volume and with the cleaner two-line dial.


* 5512: premium no-date chronometer path
<span id="production-outline"></span>
* 5513: cheaper no-date non-chronometer path
== Production outline ==


That split explains the cleaner dial layout and much of the reference's identity.
<span id="early-gilt"></span>
=== Early gilt ===


==Production outline==
The first 5513 watches use a glossy black lacquer dial with gilt printing rather than the later matte style. This phase runs from about 1962 to 1966.


The easiest way to read the 5513 is by era.
<span id="late-gilt-and-bart-simpson"></span>
=== Late gilt and Bart Simpson ===
[[File:Ref 5513 bart-simpson-coronet.jpg|thumb|right|220px|alt=5513 Bart Simpson coronet gilt gloss dial|5513 Bart Simpson coronet gilt gloss dial]]Late gilt examples lead into the Bart Simpson branch, collector shorthand for a coronet whose points look flatter and wider than the earlier shape. The branch carries its own typographic diagnostics.


===Early gilt===
<span id="matte-run"></span>
=== Matte run ===
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-dial-sequence.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=5513 matte dial sequence — meters first to Maxi V|5513 matte dial sequence — meters first to Maxi V]]


The first 5513 watches live in the glossy gilt world. "Gilt" here means a glossy black dial with gilt-colored printing rather than the later matte style. This phase runs from about 1962 to 1966, and the package includes a sold 1965 gloss-gilt archive example to keep that branch grounded.
Most 5513 watches are matte-dial watches. The matte years run from about 1966 to 1984, starting with meters-first dials (200m before 660ft), moving through serif and non-serif matte variants, and ending with the late Maxi branch and its larger lume plots.


===Late gilt and Bart Simpson===
<span id="late-gloss"></span>
=== Late gloss ===


Late gilt examples lead into the Bart Simpson branch — collector shorthand for a coronet whose points look flatter and wider than the earlier shape.
In the final years, the 5513 picks up a gloss dial with white-gold surrounds while keeping the old acrylic no-date case. Late-run examples from 1988 and 1989 show the formula clearly, usually on 93150 bracelets.


===Matte run===
<span id="movement-notes"></span>
== Movement notes ==


Most 5513 watches are matte-dial watches. The matte years run from about 1966 to 1984, with meters-first dials first (200m before 660ft), then later matte variants, and finally the late Maxi branch with larger lume plots.
Early 5513 watches ran caliber 1530; the long-run production used caliber 1520. The exact handover is not pinned to a clean dated cutover.


===Late gloss===
Early non-COSC 5512 examples share the 1530, consistent with the 5513's position as the non-chronometer alternative to the 5512. The 5513 never used the 1560 or 1570 chronometer calibers of the 5512 track.


In the final years, the 5513 picks up a gloss dial with white-gold surrounds while keeping the older acrylic no-date case. The package now has cleaner late-run archive examples from 1988 and 1989, both on 93150 bracelets.
<span id="dial-genre-timeline"></span>
== Dial timeline ==
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Gilt-dial 5513 close-up|Gilt-dial 5513 close-up]]
[[File:Ref 5513 classic-coronet-dial-detail.jpg|thumb|right|220px|alt=5513 classic coronet gilt gloss dial|5513 classic coronet gilt gloss dial]]


==Movement notes==
The dial timeline splits three ways: early gilt, the long matte middle, and late gloss at the end.
 
Serial bands below are collector approximations based on caseback stamps and surviving examples, not Rolex factory records. Watches near any transition point can blur the expected specification.
 
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! genre
! approx. years
! quick tell
! why it matters
|-
| Explorer dial
| 1962–1965
| 3-6-9 numerals on an early gilt dial
| rare special branch, usually linked to UK-market examples
|-
| Underline / Double Swiss Underline
| 1963–1964
| underline print and early pointed crown-guard context
| narrow transitional window around the radium-to-tritium change
|-
| Open chapter ring gilt
| 1964–1966
| gloss gilt dial with open outer minute track
| main late-gilt commercial branch
|-
| Bart Simpson
| around 1966
| wide, flat coronet in late gilt production
| most recognisable late-gilt subtype
|-
| Meters-first matte
| 1966–1970
| depth rating reads 200m before 660ft
| first matte generation
|-
| Serif / non-serif matte
| 1970–1976
| feet-first matte dial with marker and font diagnostics
| core middle run of the reference
|-
| Pre COMEX
| 1976–1977
| fat coronet and unusual "=" placement
| brief bridge between standard matte and Maxi dials
|-
| Maxi Mk I–V
| 1977–1984
| larger lume plots and mark-specific text alignment
| most collected late-matte subgroup
|-
| Late gloss
| 1984–1990
| gloss dial with white-gold surrounds
| bridge into the modern Submariner look
|}


The broad movement picture is stable even if the handover date is not.
<span id="explorer-dial-approx.-19621965"></span>
=== Explorer dial (approx. 1962–1965) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-explorer.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Explorer-dial 5513|Explorer-dial 5513]]


* early 5513: caliber 1530
Explorer-dial 5513 examples exist from the earliest production run and are among the most sought-after 5513 variants. The layout replaces the standard rectangular lume plots at 3, 6, and 9 o'clock with the Arabic numerals 3, 6, and 9 — borrowed directly from the Explorer — while keeping slim luminous batons at the remaining hours. Dial text is reduced in size to give the numerals room.
* long-run 5513: caliber 1520


The split is solid. The exact handover is still fuzzier than the clean summary makes it sound.
Stephen Pulvirent's Hodinkee Reference Points piece on the Submariner notes that Explorer-dial Submariners "seemed to have been made for the UK market"; the UK concentration has never been conclusively explained. Most surviving examples came from UK distribution channels, and Explorer-dial 5512 examples from the same period share the same UK-market skew. For rarity context: Phillips has sold only 15 Explorer-dial Submariner examples across all references (6200, 6538, 5510, 5512, 5513) combined. Fifteen total.


The 1530 was also used in non-COSC 5512 examples — the two references share this movement in their non-chronometer configurations. Hodinkee Reference Points notes the 5513's 1530 is "the same caliber that you'd find in the non-chronometer 5512s." Rolex introduced the 5513 in 1962 specifically as the non-COSC alternative to the 5512; the shared 1530 is a direct consequence of that positioning. The 5513 never used the 1560 or 1570 — those higher-spec movements went to the COSC-certified 5512 track only.
<span id="underline-approx.-19631964"></span>
=== Underline (approx. 1963–1964) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-underline.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Underline 5513|Underline 5513]]
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-double-swiss-underline.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Double Swiss underline 5513|Double Swiss underline 5513]]


==5513 Dial Genre Timeline==
Certain early gilt 5513 dials carry an underline (a short printed line) just below the depth rating and "Submariner" text at six o'clock. These are transitional pieces that appear across several Rolex sport references in the same period; the marking is a Rolex-wide production phenomenon. Most Underline 5513 examples also carry Cornino (pointed) crown guards, consistent with their position in early production.


The 5513 dial story is complex enough to deserve a dedicated timeline. The Field Manual and collector literature break the full run into named genres covering the gilt era first, then the long matte era. The following timeline is the best current synthesis across all sources.
<span id="double-swiss-underline-approx.-1963"></span>
=== Double Swiss Underline (approx. 1963) ===


'''Note on serial band ranges:''' Serial band ranges are collector approximations based on caseback production stamps and known examples, not Rolex factory records. Rolex does not confirm vintage production dates. Individual watches near any transition point may not conform to expected specifications.
A rarer sub-variant of the Underline. Here the underline sits beneath the Rolex signature at 12 o'clock rather than at 6 o'clock, and the dial carries two "Swiss" text printings at the bottom: one gilt, in line with an open chapter ring, and one white just below it. The Double Swiss phenomenon appears across multiple Rolex references from this period. The Double Swiss Underline 5513 is documented in collector literature as among the last 5513 examples to feature pointed (Cornino) crown guards, which sets the crown guard transition to rounded guards at approximately 1963 for the 5513.


===Explorer dial (approx. 1962–1965)===
<span id="gilt-open-chapter-ring-approx.-19641966"></span>
=== Gilt, Open Chapter Ring (approx. 1964–1966) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-open-chapter-ring.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Open chapter ring 5513|Open chapter ring 5513]]


Explorer-dial 5513 examples exist from the earliest production run and are among the most sought-after 5513 variants. The layout replaces the standard rectangular lume plots at 3, 6, and 9 o'clock with the Arabic numerals 3, 6, and 9 — borrowed directly from the Explorer — while keeping slim luminous batons at the remaining hours. Dial text is reduced in size to give the numerals room.
Once the Underline and Double Swiss variants are past, the main gilt 5513 body uses an open chapter ring: the gilt hash marks around the dial perimeter are not connected by a solid ring on the outer edge. The openness is the visual diagnostic. The outer perimeter of the minute track shows either hash marks that float free or hash marks that connect into a closed band. No underline, no exclamation marks. These are the cleanest, most straightforward early gilt 5513 examples.


Hodinkee's Reference Points piece notes that Explorer-dial Submariners "seemed to have been made for the UK market" — a genuine mystery in 5513 collecting that has not been conclusively explained. Most surviving examples came from UK distribution channels, and Explorer-dial 5512 examples from the same period share the same UK-market skew. For rarity context: Phillips has sold only 15 Explorer-dial Submariner examples across all references (6200, 6538, 5510, 5512, 5513) combined. Not 15 per reference. Fifteen total.
<span id="bart-simpson-approx.-1966-serials-approximately-1.4m1.5m"></span>
=== Bart Simpson (approx. 1966, serials approximately 1.4M–1.5M) ===


===Underline (approx. 1963–1964)===
Late gilt production brings what the collector community and auction catalogues call the Bart Simpson dial. The Rolex coronet reads as a Bart Simpson face in silhouette, with wider points, and the deep yellow color from late galvanic gilt metallurgy amplifies the cartoon resemblance. Typical serial range is 1.4M to 1.5M, with examples appearing as early as 1.3M and as late as 1.6M. Bart Simpson 5512 examples also exist but are much rarer by volume.


Certain early gilt 5513 dials carry an underline printed just below the depth rating and "Submariner" text at six o'clock. These are transitional pieces that appear across several Rolex sport references in the same period — the underline is a Rolex-wide production phenomenon, not something unique to the 5513. Most Underline 5513 examples also carry Cornino (pointed) crown guards, consistent with their position in early production.
Beyond the coronet shape, the Bart Simpson dial has several authentication details that distinguish it from the classic coronet gilt dial that immediately preceded it:


===Double Swiss Underline (approx. 1963)===
* The "L" in ROLEX sits to the left of center, underneath the coronet.
* The "P" in PERPETUAL falls directly under the extended part of the serif on the "L" in ROLEX.
* In the depth rating, the "2" and "0" align directly over the "S" and "U" in SUBMARINER.
* The 6s in the depth rating are open.
* The horizontal bars of the "f" and "t" in "ft" are aligned (co-linear).


A rarer sub-variant of the Underline: here the underline sits beneath the Rolex signature at 12 o'clock rather than at 6 o'clock, and the dial carries two "Swiss" text printings at the bottom — one gilt, in line with an open chapter ring, and one white just below it. The "Double Swiss" phenomenon appears across multiple Rolex references from this period. The Double Swiss Underline 5513 is described in collector literature as among the last 5513 examples to feature pointed (Cornino) crown guards, which places the crown guard transition to rounded guards at approximately 1963 for the 5513.
The classic coronet gilt dial that immediately precedes the Bart Simpson (typically in the 1.1M to 1.3M serial range, with examples in the very late 1.0M range) differs on several of these points:


===Gilt, Open Chapter Ring (approx. 1964–1966)===
* The "P" in PERPETUAL sits farther to the left, positioned underneath the "L" in ROLEX rather than under the serif extension.
* The shape of the letter "S" in SUBMARINER is distinctly different from the Bart Simpson version.
* The horizontal bars of the "f" and "t" in "ft" are not aligned.
* The coronet itself has cleaner, more defined lines compared to the Bart Simpson's wider, flatter points.


Once the Underline and Double Swiss variants are past, the main gilt 5513 body uses an open chapter ring — the gilt hash marks around the dial perimeter are not connected by a solid ring on the outer edge. The openness is the visual diagnostic: look at the outer perimeter of the minute track and check whether the hash marks float or connect into a closed band. No underline, no exclamation marks. These are the cleanest, most straightforward early gilt 5513 examples.
Some overlap exists during the transition between the classic coronet and the Bart Simpson dial. The classic coronet dial is also commonly seen with an underline in serial ranges corresponding to 1963.


===Bart Simpson (approx. 1966)===
<span id="matte-meters-first-approx.-19661970-serials-approximately-1.6m-to-2.2m"></span>
=== Matte, Meters First (approx. 1966–1970, serials approximately 1.6M to 2.2M) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-meters-first-tritium-flat.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Flat tritium|Flat tritium (late)]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-meters-first-tritium-dome.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Dome tritium|Dome tritium (mid)]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-meters-first-tritium-thin.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Thin tritium|Thin tritium (early)]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-meters-first-swiss-t25.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=SWISS T<25 spanning five hash marks|SWISS T<25 spanning five hash marks]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-meters-first-detail-2.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Meters first depth rating detail|Meters first depth rating detail]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-meters-first-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Meters first dial detail|Meters first dial detail]]


Late gilt production brings what the collector community — and auction catalogues — call the Bart Simpson dial. The Rolex coronet reads as a Bart Simpson face in silhouette: the points are wider, and the deep yellow color from the galvanic gilt process amplifies the cartoon resemblance. The color is not a quality defect; it is a result of how the gilt metallurgy works late in the gilt era. Bart Simpson 5512 examples also exist but are much rarer by volume. A bright yellow coronet on a late gilt 5513 is a Bart Simpson.
The transition from gilt-gloss to meters-first matte dials started around the 1.6M serial range (approximately 1966). By serial 1.7M (1968), the meters-first matte dial was in full production. The depth rating puts metric units first ("200m = 660ft"), which is why collectors call them meters-first. The shift to feet-first depth ratings overlaps in the 2.2M serial range (late 1969 to early 1970), where both meters-first and feet-first dials appear.


===Matte, Meters First (approx. 1967–1969, serials approximately 1.5M to 1.7M)===
Authentication details for the Meters First dial:


The transition to matte dials with white printing begins here. The depth rating still puts metric units first — 200m before 660ft, which is why collectors call them meters-first. These dials are parallel to the 5512's own matte transition in the same serial range and are the earliest matte 5513 examples. Scarcer than later matte variants and sitting at the gilt-to-matte boundary, they stay in demand.
* The "L" in "ROLEX" has very little if any serif on top and is centered under the coronet.
* The 6s in the depth rating are semi-open: the top of the 6 appears rotated a couple of degrees clockwise (may require a 10x loupe to confirm).
* The "S" in "SUBMARINER" has a characteristic shape: the top part is straight across, and the middle horizontal portion sits closer to the top than the bottom.
* "SWISS - T &lt; 25" at the bottom of the dial spans five minute hash marks. This is wider than subsequent matte dials, which span only three hash marks. (A short run of 5512 meters-first matte dials had "SWISS - T &lt; 25" across only three hash marks, but no 5513 example with this narrower spacing is known.)


===Non-serif (1969–1970, serials approximately 2M)===
Tritium application varies across the meters-first production run: early examples have a very thin layer of tritium that can appear very white and may be hard to detect without a loupe; mid-production examples show more dome-like tritium plots; late production examples have tritium applied in a flat layer, similar to the style used throughout the 1970s.


The next generation uses non-serif text for the dial printing. The change from the meters-first layout to the non-serif style is subtle but tracked by specialists. These dials are part of the long middle matte era.
<span id="non-serif-first-run-late-19691970-serials-approximately-early-2.0m"></span>
=== Non-serif, first run (late 1969–1970, serials approximately early 2.0M) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-serif-nonserif-timeline.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Serif vs non-serif timeline|Serif vs non-serif timeline]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-serif-detail-2.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Serif hour marker flair|Serif hour marker flair]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-nonserif-detail-2.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Non-serif hour marker corners|Non-serif hour marker corners]]The first non-serif dials appear in the very early 2.0M serial range (late 1969 to early 1970), immediately following the meters-first dials. The depth rating switches to feet first ("660ft = 200m"). The "=" sign sits above and slightly to the right of the "A" in "SUBMARINER." "SUBMARINER" is printed below the depth rating. The 6s in the depth rating are open.


===Serif (1970–1973, serials approximately 2M to 4M)===
The non-serif dial is identified by the corners of the 3, 6, and 9 o'clock hour markers, which form perfect 90-degree angles with no extensions or flair. The middle horizontal stroke of the "E" in "ROLEX" has an abundance of serif at its end. The "P" in "PERPETUAL" is shifted to the left relative to the "L" in "ROLEX" above it.


Serif dials introduce a serif typeface for the dial printing. This is the most common early-to-mid matte genre and the one most collectors encounter when they think of a matte 5513.
<span id="serif-19701973-serials-approximately-earlymid-2.0m-to-late-3.0mearly-4.0m"></span>
=== Serif (1970–1973, serials approximately early/mid 2.0M to late 3.0M/early 4.0M) ===


===Non-serif again (1973–1976)===
Serif dials introduce small extensions (sharp points or "flair") at the corners of the 3, 6, and 9 o'clock hour markers. This is the distinguishing feature from the non-serif dial. The middle horizontal stroke of the "E" in "ROLEX" has no serif at its end, the opposite of the non-serif dial. The depth rating remains feet first, with the "=" sign above and slightly to the right of the "A" in "SUBMARINER." "SUBMARINER" is printed below the depth rating.


The dial printing returns to non-serif text in the mid-1970s. This second non-serif phase runs until the Maxi era begins and represents the tail end of standard matte production.
Tritium was hand-applied and can cover the serif extensions on hour markers, making a Serif dial look like a Non-serif. When the hour markers are ambiguous, the "E" in "ROLEX" resolves it: abundance of serif on the middle stroke means non-serif dial; no serif on the middle stroke means serif dial.


===Maxi MK I through MK V (1976–1984)===
The Serif dial is the most common early-to-mid matte genre and the one most collectors picture when they think of a matte 5513.


The Maxi era introduces noticeably larger lume plots and bolder printing. Collectors break the Maxi phase into five marks, MK I through MK V, based on progressively larger lume plots and subtle text changes. The Maxi era is the most actively collected matte phase because the visual differences between marks are large enough to create distinct sub-branches.
<span id="non-serif-second-run-19731976-serials-approximately-late-3.0m-to-earlymid-5.0m"></span>
=== Non-serif, second run (1973–1976, serials approximately late 3.0M to early/mid 5.0M) ===


* '''MK I''' (1976–1977): First enlarged lume plots
The dial printing returns to non-serif text in the mid-1970s. The transition back from serif to non-serif began in the late 3.0M serial range. This second non-serif phase runs until the Pre COMEX dial appears in the early-to-mid 5.0M range. The same hour-marker and "E" in "ROLEX" diagnostics apply as in the first non-serif run.
* '''MK II''' (1977–1979): Slightly larger plots than MK I
* '''MK III''' (1979–1981): Further enlargement. Forum research places Maxi III examples in the 5M–6M serial range.
* '''MK IV''' (1981–1983): Near-maximum plot size
* '''MK V''' (1983–1984): Final and largest matte lume plots


===Gloss (1984–1990)===
<span id="pre-comex-approx.-19761977-serials-approximately-5.0m"></span>
=== Pre COMEX (approx. 1976–1977, serials approximately 5.0M) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-precomex-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Pre COMEX dial detail|Pre COMEX dial detail]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-precomex-detail-2.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Pre COMEX text detail|Pre COMEX text detail]]


The final 5513 dials return to a glossy finish but with white-gold surrounds rather than the gilt printing of the early era. This is the late gloss phase that bridges the acrylic-crystal 5513 and the later modern Submariner world. Gloss 5513 dials are visually distinct from everything that came before and sit in their own collecting lane.
The term "Pre COMEX" was coined by Ed Delgado on the Vintage Rolex Forum on October 24, 2008, to describe dials with characteristics very similar to some COMEX 5514 dials. This dial sits between the second non-serif run and the Maxi I.


==Dial map==
Authentication details:


The dial is where the 5513 breaks into real sub-families.
* The coronet is somewhat smudgy and noticeably fat at the bottom, wider than the Maxi I coronet that follows.
* The top of the "L" in "ROLEX" has a tremendous amount of serif and sits to the left of center under the coronet.
* The 6s in the depth rating are open.
* The "=" sign in the depth rating sits above and to the left of center of the "A" in "SUBMARINER," a key differentiator from other matte dials where it sits to the right or directly above.
* "SUBMARINER" is printed below the depth rating.
* The "S" in "SUBMARINER" has a normal appearance (not the zig-zag shape seen on Maxi I and IV).


Its dial taxonomy uses named types (Underline, Bart Simpson, Maxi Mark I–V) rather than the generation-based system used for the 5512. Both systems are standard in collector literature.
Quick identification: a smudge-like coronet with an "L" with abundant serif underneath, depth rating above "SUBMARINER," and the "=" sign above and slightly to the left of the "A." That combination identifies a Pre COMEX dial.


===Gilt===
<span id="maxi-mk-i-through-mk-v-19771984"></span>
=== Maxi MK I through MK V (1977–1984) ===
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-maxi-v-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Maxi V dial|Maxi V dial]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-maxi-iv-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Maxi IV dial|Maxi IV dial]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-maxi-iii-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Maxi III lollipop dial|Maxi III lollipop dial]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-maxi-ii-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Maxi II dial|Maxi II dial]]
[[File:Ref 5513 matte-maxi-i-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=Maxi I dial|Maxi I dial]]
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-maxi.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=5513 Maxi dial|5513 Maxi dial]]
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-maxi 2.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=5513 Maxi dial detail|5513 Maxi dial detail]]


Early examples are glossy gilt dials and form the first branch.
The Maxi era introduces noticeably larger lume plots and bolder printing. The name "Maxi" was carried over from the 16610LV introduced in 2003 and applied retroactively to these earlier large-plot dials. Collectors break the Maxi phase into five marks, MK I through MK V, based on lume plot size, text position, and specific typographic details. All Maxi dials have coronets that are narrower at the bottom than the Serif and Pre COMEX dials. All Maxi dials have open 6s in the depth rating. All Maxi dials except the Maxi I have "SUBMARINER" printed above the depth rating.


===Bart Simpson===
Two identifiers recur across Maxi dials and serve as quick sorting tools:


Bart Simpson dials are late gilt 5513 dials, usually clustered around 1966.
The "=" sign position relative to the "A" in SUBMARINER sorts Maxi I through V quickly: Maxi I has it directly above the "A"; Maxi II directly below and in the middle of the "A"; Maxi III uses the "200m" alignment instead, with the two 0s in "200m" lining up under the "N" and "E" of "SUBMARINER"; Maxi IV directly below the "A" but shifted slightly to the right; Maxi V directly below and in the middle of the "A."


===Matte===
The "S" shape in "SUBMARINER" is the second quick sort. A zig-zag S (resembling a backwards capital Z) appears on Maxi I and Maxi IV. A normal S appears on Maxi II, Maxi III, and Maxi V.


Matte 5513 dials cover most of the run and include early meters-first examples, later matte variants, and the Maxi branch late in the matte era. See the 5513 Dial Genre Timeline section above for the full breakdown.
MK I (1977–1978, serials early/mid 5.0M to early 6.0M): The last matte dial with "SUBMARINER" printed below the depth rating. Tritium hour plots are very large but do not touch the minute marks. The coronet is tapered and slender at the bottom, a key distinction from the preceding Pre COMEX's fat coronet. Carries the zig-zag S in "SUBMARINER." The "=" sign sits directly above the "A" in "SUBMARINER."


===Late gloss / white-gold surrounds===
MK II (1978, serials 5.0M to early 6.0M): The first matte dial with "SUBMARINER" printed above the depth rating. "SUBMARINER" is shorter in length than the depth rating below it. The "f" in the depth rating lacks serif. Normal "S" in "SUBMARINER." The "=" sign sits directly below and in the middle of the "A."


Late gloss dials with white-gold surrounds sit at the end of the run and bridge the old acrylic Submariner world and the later modern look.
MK III (approximately 1978, serials 5.0M to 6.0M): Large tritium hour plots that often appear to touch the five-minute hash marks (nicknamed "lollipop"), though under magnification they do not always make contact. "SUBMARINER" above the depth rating and shorter in length. Large open 6s. The "f" in the depth rating has a distinctive serif. The two 0s in "200m" line up directly underneath the "N" and "E" in "SUBMARINER."


==Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes==
MK IV (approximately 1981, serials late 6.0M to late 7.0M): "SUBMARINER" above the depth rating and shorter in length. Shares the zig-zag S with Maxi I. The "=" sign sits directly below the "A" but shifted slightly to the right, distinguishing it from Maxi II where it is centered.


At a high level, the 5513 keeps a stable core form: 40mm crown-guard case, acrylic crystal, and rotating dive bezel. The harder work starts when moving beyond that into insert families, service replacements, and late swap parts.
MK V (serials 7.0M to 8.0M, through approximately 1984): "SUBMARINER" printed above the depth rating, but unlike Maxi II–IV, the "SUBMARINER" text is longer than the depth rating below it — a unique characteristic among Maxi dials. Open 6s. The "f" in the depth rating lacks serif. The "=" sign sits directly below and in the middle of the "A." Production continued until approximately 1984 when the black gloss dial with white-gold surrounds was introduced.


===Crown guard transition===
<span id="gloss-19841990"></span>
=== Gloss (1984–1990) ===


Rolex introduced the 5513 with the same pointed Cornino crown guards that the 5512 had adopted by 1960. The 5512 established crown guards as the Submariner standard in 1959; the 5513 inherited that design two years later. The first 5513 watches (from 1962 introduction) carry those same pointed Cornino guards, consistent with that inherited starting point. The transition from Cornino to rounded crown guards happened in the same mid-1960s period on both references. The Double Swiss Underline 5513 — documentable to approximately 1963 — is specifically noted in collector literature as among the last 5513 examples to carry pointed crown guards, which sets the approximate end of the Cornino era for the 5513 at 1963 or very shortly after. Rounded crown guards are standard on all later 5513 production.
The final 5513 dials return to a glossy finish, but with white-gold surrounds around the hour markers rather than the gilt printing of the early era. This is the late gloss phase that bridges the acrylic-crystal 5513 and the later modern Submariner world. Gloss 5513 dials are visually distinct from everything that came before and sit in their own collecting lane.


==Dial authentication and service dial warning==
<span id="dial-map"></span>
== Dial map ==


The 5513 dial is a significant fraud and replacement vector across the entire production run, not just the early gilt years. The long production span and high volume of surviving watches means replacement dials exist in quantity — sourced from scrapped watches, service stock, and the secondary parts market — and they turn up on otherwise honest examples.
Collectors usually split the 5513 into four families: early gilt, late-gilt Bart Simpson, the long matte middle, and late gloss. Named sub-variants live inside those families.


'''Matte dials, 1970s–1980s:''' White-print matte 5513 dials from the long middle run are frequent service-replacement targets. Signs of a replacement dial include font weight that does not match the serial range, text sizing that is slightly off for the era, and a depth rating format inconsistent with the watch's production period. Aged genuine dials will also show light and patina consistent with decades of wear; a dial that looks fresh on a 1970s case deserves scrutiny.
<span id="case-bezel-crystal-and-crown-notes"></span>
== Case, bezel, crystal, and crown ==


'''Maxi dial era (MK I through MK V):''' The Maxi variants are particularly at risk because they are actively collected and command premiums over standard matte dials. Replacement Maxi dials exist, and the marks are specific enough that a mismatched mark on the wrong serial band is a red flag. The lume plot size and text configuration should be consistent with the production period implied by the case serial.
The 5513 case form stays stable across the run: a 40mm crown-guard case, acrylic crystal, and rotating dive bezel. The case changes less than the dial. Most of the hard originality work sits in inserts, crowns, and later service parts.


'''"Swiss Made" text configuration:''' The text at the bottom of the 5513 dial changed configuration across the decades. A dial from the wrong era — whether too early or too late for the case serial — will show the wrong "Swiss Made" format. This is one of the easier cross-checks for those who know what configuration belongs in what period.
<span id="crown-guard-transition"></span>
=== Crown guard transition ===


'''Gilt dials:''' Early gilt 5513 chapter ring dials carry the same premium and the same risk as their 5512 counterparts. Refinished dials exist. A genuine gilt 5513 dial should have the correct coronet shape for its era, correct chapter ring style (open vs. closed as appropriate for the production date), and print characteristics consistent with the serial band.
The first 5513s start with pointed Cornino crown guards inherited from the 5512. Rounded guards take over by the mid-1960s and stay there through the rest of the run. The shift covers a transition zone of overlapping production rather than a single dated cutover.


The honest summary: on any 5513 where value is a serious consideration, verify the dial independently from the case. Bracelet and clasp drift are widely understood; dial drift is just as common and more consequential for value.
<span id="dial-authentication-and-service-dial-warning"></span>
== Dial originality and service dials ==


==Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes==
The dial is the biggest originality trap on the 5513. Long production and hard service life mean correct dials, later service dials, and outright bad dials all circulate on honest-looking cases.


Current book-backed fitment notes:
Matte 5513 dials from the 1970s and 1980s are frequent service-replacement territory. Font weight, text sizing, and depth-rating format should all match the case period. A dial that looks too fresh for the case deserves scrutiny.


* 7206 with end link 80
Maxi dials attract premiums, so they attract replacement and misidentified parts too. The mark has to match the serial-era logic, lume plot size, and text arrangement.
* 9315 with end links 280 or 380 (forum research places the 9315 bracelet as starting from approximately 1972)
* 93150 with end link 580


That is a fitment map, not a final delivery chart.
The lower dial text is one of the easier cross-checks. A case and dial from different eras often give themselves away here.


Rolex Forum collectors note an important regional bracelet distinction: USA-market C+I (Credit et Industrie) bracelets used hollow rivets, while Swiss-market bracelets used solid pins. The difference was driven by US import tax regulations — hollow rivets reduced the declared metal weight and therefore the duty. This distinction matters for authentication and for understanding why otherwise-identical bracelets from different markets can feel different in hand.
Early gilt 5513 dials carry the same premium and the same risk as early 5512 dials. Coronet shape, chapter-ring style, and print character all have to match the period.


The archive work makes the warning sharper. One Bob's archive example shows a 93150/580 bracelet with H clasp from 1983 on a watch the dealer also describes as carrying later replacement dial, hands, and service insert. Another archived example shows a CP 12 clasp described as a post-2011 replacement on a 5513. Bracelet and clasp dates can drift a long way from the watch head.
The dial deserves its own pass against the case. Bracelet drift is common on long-run references; dial drift carries more weight on the 5513 because the matte and Maxi premiums sit on the dial itself.


The cleaner 1988 and 1989 late-gloss Bob's examples are useful because they show the end of the run without the same level of mixed-parts confusion.
<span id="bracelets-end-links-clasps-and-packaging-notes"></span>
== Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes ==
[[File:Ref 5513 bracelet-detail 2.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Meters-first matte 5513 on Oyster bracelet|Meters-first matte 5513 on Oyster bracelet]]
[[File:Ref 5513 bracelet-detail.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Late gloss 5513 on Oyster bracelet|Late gloss 5513 on Oyster bracelet]]


Packaging needs the same caution. The current source set supports period-based packaging logic, not a neat one-box-per-reference rule.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! bracelet
! end links
! note
|-
| 7206
| 80
| early rivet-era fitment
|-
| 9315
| 280 or 380
| documented by the early 1970s
|-
| 93150
| 580
| late-run fitment and common later replacement
|}


==Special branches==
The table is a fitment map. A clasp code dates the bracelet rather than the watch head, and bracelet swaps across the long run are common.


===Explorer dial===
USA-market C+I (Credit et Industrie) bracelets used hollow rivets while Swiss-market bracelets used solid pins. The distinction matters for authentication and feel, but not every surviving watch still carries its original bracelet.


Explorer-dial 5513 examples deserve separate treatment from the standard dial run. "Explorer dial" here means the 3-6-9 numeral layout at those hour positions — borrowed directly from the Explorer line — combined with slim luminous batons at the remaining hours and reduced dial text to give the numerals room. These were produced approximately 1962–1965 and appear to have been made primarily for the UK market, though no factory explanation for the UK concentration has been confirmed.
Surviving 5513s frequently turn up with later 93150 bracelets, much later clasp stamps, and other mixed service parts. Packaging tracks the sale period and market rather than the reference number itself.


The strongest auction example in the current source set is Sotheby's 2020 Lot 377, a family-owned 1964 watch with 1530 movement, UK Garrard guarantee dated 1965, and later service papers. The Garrard provenance anchors both the UK-market thesis and the date range.
<span id="special-branches"></span>
== Special branches ==
[[File:Ref 5513 historical-example 2.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Military-engraved 5513 caseback example|Military-engraved 5513 caseback example]]
[[File:Ref 5513 historical-example 3.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Commercial 5513 on Oyster bracelet|Commercial 5513 on Oyster bracelet]]
[[File:Ref 5513 historical-example 4.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Early gilt 5513 on strap|Early gilt 5513 on strap]]
[[File:Ref 5513 historical-example.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Spider-dial 5513 example|Spider-dial 5513 example]]


For rarity context: Phillips has sold only 15 Explorer-dial Submariner examples across all references combined — 6200, 6538, 5510, 5512, and 5513. That is not 15 per reference. That is 15 total.
<span id="explorer-dial"></span>
=== Explorer dial ===


===MilSub===
The Explorer-dial branch sits inside the early gilt run as a distinct collecting line. The dial-timeline section above covers the 3-6-9 layout and the UK-market skew; the provenance below anchors both.


British military 5513 work belongs in its own branch. Collectors shorten "military Submariner" to "MilSub." The archive set includes both a South African Army-associated 5513 and a sold 1974 military 5513 from Watches of Distinction, which helps show both non-British military use and the messy service life of military-issued watches. The British military designation for the 5513 MilSub was W10 — the NATO stock classification for military-issue wristwatches.
Sotheby's 2020 Lot 377 carried a family-owned 1964 watch with caliber 1530, UK Garrard guarantee dated 1965, and later service papers. The Garrard provenance supports both the UK-market thesis and the date range.


Forum research has documented additional military and institutional procurement branches:
<span id="milsub"></span>
=== MilSub ===
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-milsub.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=MilSub 5513|MilSub 5513]]
[[File:Ref 5513 dial-variant-milsub 2.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=MilSub 5513 detail|MilSub 5513 detail]]


* '''Chilean Navy''': examples marked "Propriedad Armada de Chile" (Property of the Chilean Navy) on the caseback, confirming South American naval procurement beyond the better-known Argentine Navy 5514 COMEX connection.
British military 5513 work belongs in its own branch. Collectors shorten "military Submariner" to MilSub. Documented examples include both a South African Army-associated 5513 and a sold 1974 military 5513, which shows both non-British military use and the messy service life of issued watches. The British military designation for the 5513 MilSub was W10, the NATO stock classification for military-issue wristwatches.
* '''New Zealand Fisheries Research Division''': purchased 14 Submariners for research divers — a small institutional order that places the 5513 in a scientific-research context alongside its military and commercial diving roles.


An important distinction Rolex Forum collectors emphasize: US Navy SEALs were issued Tudor Submariners, not Rolex Submariners. The SEAL-Rolex association is a common misconception. The Tudor connection is well documented in military procurement records, while Rolex Submariners went to the British Royal Navy (5517) and various other naval forces through standard procurement channels.
Rolex Forum research has documented additional military and institutional procurement branches. Chilean Navy examples are marked "Propriedad Armada de Chile" (Property of the Chilean Navy) on the caseback, confirming South American naval procurement beyond the better-known Argentine Navy 5514 COMEX connection. The New Zealand Fisheries Research Division purchased 14 Submariners for research divers, a small institutional order that places the 5513 in a scientific-research context alongside its military and commercial diving roles.


==Historical market and auction record==
One distinction Rolex Forum collectors emphasize: US Navy SEALs were issued Tudor Submariners, not Rolex Submariners. The SEAL-Rolex association is a common misconception. The Tudor connection is well documented in military procurement records, while Rolex Submariners went to the British Royal Navy (as the 5517) and various other naval forces through standard procurement channels.


The lot and archive set is concrete enough to say something useful.
<span id="historical-market-and-auction-record"></span>
== Historical market and auction record ==


Wind reports 151,449 pieces for total 5513 production, citing the Rolex-commissioned Submariner book by Nicholas Foulkes, and reports late-1960s US retail pricing around $160–$175.
The market spread is wide because the 5513 spans common commercial watches, rare dial branches, and military provenance. Standard late-matte and gloss examples remain readily available; the branch watches do not. Late-1960s US retail pricing ran around $160–$175.


The observed market examples show how far the reference spreads once provenance and branch type enter the picture. Sotheby's 2020 Lot 377 treated a family-owned 1964 Explorer-dial 5513 as a 60,000–90,000 GBP watch with Garrard guarantee and service papers. In the same sale, Sotheby's Lot 376 carried a lower 24,000–36,000 GBP estimate for a South African Army-associated 5513, but leaned heavily on the watch's military provenance, engraved caseback serial, late meters-first dial, and 7206/80 bracelet. Watches of Distinction also archived a sold 1974 military 5513 and explicitly notes same-batch but non-matching case and inside-caseback numbers, blamed on MOD servicing mix-ups.
Auction results sort the reference into clear lanes. Explorer-dial, military, and strong early-gilt watches sit well above ordinary late commercial examples. Standard commercial 5513s are plentiful; Bart Simpson, early gilt, and cleaner full-set examples pull into a higher lane quickly.


Dealer archives fill in the commercial and late-gilt side. Amsterdam Vintage Watches archived a sold 1968 meters-first commercial 5513, while Grey and Patina archived a sold 1966 Bart Simpson example with a tropical dial (the black dial has aged brown), a closed chapter ring (the minute track forms a complete ring near the dial edge), a Mk2 Long 5 insert, and Oyster rivet bracelet. "Long 5" is collector shorthand for an insert whose 5 has a long tail. Grey and Patina also archived a sold 1965 gloss-gilt example with stated box and papers, listed at $24,800 — useful as an early-branch market example even if it does not prove a packaging standard.
Mixed-parts watches are common. Documented spider-dial and bracelet-focused 5513 examples show replacement dials, inserts, crowns, later bracelets, and much later clasp stamps sitting together on one otherwise honest watch. Spider dial refers to a glossy dial with lacquer crazing; the effect turns up across a broad late-vintage band rather than a single year.


The mixed-parts side matters too. Bob's archived spider dial and bracelet-focused 5513 examples show how replacement dial, replacement insert, replacement crown, later bracelets, and much later clasp stamps can all sit on one honest vintage watch. "Spider dial" means a glossy dial that has crazed into a web-like pattern. Forum research documents the spider dial aging phenomenon as occurring on dials produced between approximately 1964 and 1988 a wide window that reflects the lacquer chemistry used during those years. Not all dials from this period develop the spider pattern; it depends on storage conditions, humidity exposure, and the specific batch of lacquer used.
== Sources ==
* ''The Vintage Rolex Field Manual'' — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
* [https://monochrome-watches.com/rolex-submariner-history-part-2-the-55xx-1680references/ History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 2, The 55XX References and 1680 Date] — Tom Mulraney, Monochrome
* [https://www.sothebys.com/en/articles/how-to-start-collecting-the-rolex-submariner The Rolex Submariner: A Complete Collector's Guide] — Stephen Pulvirent, Sotheby's
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/rolex-blog/rolex-info/vintage-week-rolex-submariner-5513.html Rolex 5513 Submariner Review & Ultimate Buying Guide] — Bob's Watches
* [https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/explaining-the-bart-simpson-rolex-submariner-erics-favorite Explaining The Bart Simpson Rolex Submariner: Eric's Favorite Coronet] — Eric Wind, Hodinkee
* [https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/rolex-submariner-reference-points Reference Points: Understanding The Rolex Submariner] — Stephen Pulvirent, Hodinkee
* [https://le-monde-edmond.com/5512-submariner-in-depth-review/ In depth-review Rolex 5512 Submariner] — Edmond Saran, Le Monde Edmond
* [https://www.windvintage.com/blog/collectors-guide-rolex-submariner-reference-5512 Collector's Guide: What To Know About The Rolex Submariner Reference 5512] — Charlie Dunne, Wind Vintage
* [https://www.watchprosite.com/editors-picks/vintage-rolex-box-reference-guide-list-1950-to-mid-2000-s/732.1629451.16558431/ Vintage Rolex Box reference guide list 1950 to mid 2000's] — WatchProSite community, WatchProSite
* [https://www.sothebys.com/buy/0bfeaa8a-22d0-4e8d-9200-0d1a611ef7ea/lots/ec00c334-b62d-4907-8bb3-568a5101a36b Rolex Submariner "South African Army", Ref 5513, Military Stainless Steel Wristwatch With Bracelet, Circa 1970] — Sotheby's, Sotheby's
* [https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2020/watches-4/rolex-submariner-explorer-dial-ref-5513-stainless Rolex Submariner "Explorer Dial", Ref 5513, Stainless Steel Wristwatch With Rare Dial And Bracelet, Circa 1964] — Sotheby's, Sotheby's
* [https://amsterdamvintagewatches.com/shop/rolex-submariner-5513-meters-first-dial/ Rolex Submariner 5513 'Meters First'] — Amsterdam Vintage Watches, Amsterdam Vintage Watches
* [https://greyandpatina.com/product/1966-rolex-5513-bart-simpson-tropical-patina-submariner/ 1966 Rolex 5513 "Bart Simpson" Tropical Patina Submariner] — Grey and Patina, Grey and Patina
* [https://greyandpatina.com/product/1965-rolex-5513-meters-first-gilt-submariner-w-box-paper/ 1965 Rolex 5513 Gloss Gilt Submariner W/Box & Paper] — Grey and Patina, Grey and Patina
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-rolex-submariner-ref-5513-black-spider-dial.html Vintage Rolex Submariner Ref 5513 Black Spider Dial] — Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-rolex-submariner-ref-5513-stainless-steel-bracelet.html Vintage Rolex Submariner Ref 5513 Stainless Steel Bracelet] — Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-1989-rolex-submariner-5513.html Vintage 1989 Rolex Submariner 5513] Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-rolex-submariner-5513-stainless-steel-oyster.html Vintage Rolex Submariner 5513 Stainless Steel Oyster] — Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
* [https://watchesofdistinction.com/product/rolex-military-submariner-ref-5513-1974/ Rolex Military Submariner Ref 5513 (1974)] — Watches of Distinction, Watches of Distinction


==Sources==
* [http://www.5513mattedial.com/ 5513 Matte Dial and Gilt-Gloss 5512 Submariner — Comprehensive Reviews] — Beaumont Miller II, 5513mattedial.com


* Morning Tundra, "The Vintage Rolex Field Manual, Chevalier Edition", unknown
Named contributors: Research by Beaumont Miller II (5513mattedial.com), with acknowledged contributions from Marcello Pisani, Jedly, and Tomvox. The Maxi dial taxonomy draws on Tomvox's 2008 research. The "Pre COMEX" dial designation was coined by Ed Delgado on the Vintage Rolex Forum (October 24, 2008).
* [https://monochrome-watches.com/rolex-submariner-history-part-2-the-55xx-1680references/ Tom Mulraney, "History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 2, The 55XX References and 1680 Date", Monochrome, 2020-08-19]
* [https://www.sothebys.com/en/articles/how-to-start-collecting-the-rolex-submariner Stephen Pulvirent, "The Rolex Submariner: A Complete Collector's Guide", Sotheby's, 2025-03-07]
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/rolex-blog/rolex-info/vintage-week-rolex-submariner-5513.html Bob's Watches, "Rolex 5513 Submariner Review & Ultimate Buying Guide", Bob's Watches, 2025]
* [https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/explaining-the-bart-simpson-rolex-submariner-erics-favorite Eric Wind, "Explaining The Bart Simpson Rolex Submariner: Eric's Favorite Coronet", Hodinkee, 2011-04-22]
* [https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/rolex-submariner-reference-points Stephen Pulvirent, "Reference Points: Understanding The Rolex Submariner", Hodinkee, 2019-07-18]
* [https://le-monde-edmond.com/5512-submariner-in-depth-review/ Edmond Saran, "In depth-review Rolex 5512 Submariner", Le Monde Edmond, 2014-05-11]
* [https://www.windvintage.com/blog/collectors-guide-rolex-submariner-reference-5512 Charlie Dunne, "Collector's Guide: What To Know About The Rolex Submariner Reference 5512", Wind Vintage, 2024]
* [https://www.watchprosite.com/editors-picks/vintage-rolex-box-reference-guide-list-1950-to-mid-2000-s/732.1629451.16558431/ unknown, "Vintage Rolex Box reference guide list 1950 to mid 2000's", WatchProSite]
* [https://www.sothebys.com/buy/0bfeaa8a-22d0-4e8d-9200-0d1a611ef7ea/lots/ec00c334-b62d-4907-8bb3-568a5101a36b unknown, "Rolex Submariner "South African Army", Ref 5513, Military Stainless Steel Wristwatch With Bracelet, Circa 1970", Sotheby's, 2020-10-28]
* [https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2020/watches-4/rolex-submariner-explorer-dial-ref-5513-stainless unknown, "Rolex Submariner "Explorer Dial", Ref 5513, Stainless Steel Wristwatch With Rare Dial And Bracelet, Circa 1964", Sotheby's, 2020-10-28]
* [https://amsterdamvintagewatches.com/shop/rolex-submariner-5513-meters-first-dial/ unknown, "Rolex Submariner 5513 'Meters First'", Amsterdam Vintage Watches]
* [https://greyandpatina.com/product/1966-rolex-5513-bart-simpson-tropical-patina-submariner/ unknown, "1966 Rolex 5513 "Bart Simpson" Tropical Patina Submariner", Grey and Patina, 2024]
* [https://greyandpatina.com/product/1965-rolex-5513-meters-first-gilt-submariner-w-box-paper/ unknown, "1965 Rolex 5513 Gloss Gilt Submariner W/Box & Paper", Grey and Patina, 2025]
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-rolex-submariner-ref-5513-black-spider-dial.html unknown, "Vintage Rolex Submariner Ref 5513 Black Spider Dial", Bob's Watches]
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-rolex-submariner-ref-5513-stainless-steel-bracelet.html unknown, "Vintage Rolex Submariner Ref 5513 Stainless Steel Bracelet", Bob's Watches]
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-1989-rolex-submariner-5513.html unknown, "Vintage 1989 Rolex Submariner 5513", Bob's Watches]
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/vintage-rolex-submariner-5513-stainless-steel-oyster.html unknown, "Vintage Rolex Submariner 5513 Stainless Steel Oyster", Bob's Watches]
* [https://watchesofdistinction.com/product/rolex-military-submariner-ref-5513-1974/ unknown, "Rolex Military Submariner Ref 5513 (1974)", Watches of Distinction]


==Gallery==
<span id="related-references"></span>
== Related references ==


<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
The 5513 sits inside the [[Reference:submariner-5xxx-family|5xxx Submariner family]] alongside the chronometer 5512 and the institutional 5514 and 5517. Two military and commercial branches use the 5513 case as their host: the [[Reference:comex|COMEX]] program (Compagnie Maritime d'Expertises) issued 5513s to French saturation divers from the early 1970s, and the British military [[Reference:milsub|MilSub]] configuration ran on 5513 cases for the first two batches before the dedicated 5517 took over in the third.
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-maxi.jpg|dial-variant-maxi
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-maxi_2.jpg|dial-variant-maxi 2
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-bart-simpson.jpg|dial-variant-bart-simpson
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-explorer.jpg|dial-variant-explorer
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-underline.jpg|dial-variant-underline
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-double-swiss-underline.jpg|dial-variant-double-swiss-underline
File:Ref_5513_dial-variant-milsub.jpg|dial-variant-milsub
</gallery>


[[Category:Submariner]]
[[Category:Submariner]]
[[Category:working-draft]]
[[Category:Working Draft]]
[[Category:References]]

Latest revision as of 04:22, 30 April 2026


Submariner -> 5513

The 5513 is the long-run no-date Submariner, the cheaper non-chronometer partner to the 5512, produced from about 1962 to 1989/1990 across twenty-seven continuous years. Early watches are gloss gilt, most of the run is matte, and the final years return to gloss with white-gold surrounds.

Late gloss 5513
Late gloss 5513

Core facts

detail value
reference 5513
family Submariner (no date, non-chronometer)
production approximately 1962 to 1989/1990
total production 151,449 units
movement caliber 1530 (early), 1520 (long run)
case 40mm, crown guards
crystal acrylic
position non-chronometer counterpart to the 5512

Where it sits in the line

The 5513 sits next to the 5512, not above it. The 5512 was the premium no-date chronometer. The 5513 was the cheaper non-chronometer, sold in far greater volume and with the cleaner two-line dial.

Production outline

Early gilt

The first 5513 watches use a glossy black lacquer dial with gilt printing rather than the later matte style. This phase runs from about 1962 to 1966.

Late gilt and Bart Simpson

5513 Bart Simpson coronet gilt gloss dial
5513 Bart Simpson coronet gilt gloss dial

Late gilt examples lead into the Bart Simpson branch, collector shorthand for a coronet whose points look flatter and wider than the earlier shape. The branch carries its own typographic diagnostics.

Matte run

5513 matte dial sequence — meters first to Maxi V
5513 matte dial sequence — meters first to Maxi V

Most 5513 watches are matte-dial watches. The matte years run from about 1966 to 1984, starting with meters-first dials (200m before 660ft), moving through serif and non-serif matte variants, and ending with the late Maxi branch and its larger lume plots.

Late gloss

In the final years, the 5513 picks up a gloss dial with white-gold surrounds while keeping the old acrylic no-date case. Late-run examples from 1988 and 1989 show the formula clearly, usually on 93150 bracelets.

Movement notes

Early 5513 watches ran caliber 1530; the long-run production used caliber 1520. The exact handover is not pinned to a clean dated cutover.

Early non-COSC 5512 examples share the 1530, consistent with the 5513's position as the non-chronometer alternative to the 5512. The 5513 never used the 1560 or 1570 chronometer calibers of the 5512 track.

Dial timeline

Gilt-dial 5513 close-up
Gilt-dial 5513 close-up
5513 classic coronet gilt gloss dial
5513 classic coronet gilt gloss dial

The dial timeline splits three ways: early gilt, the long matte middle, and late gloss at the end.

Serial bands below are collector approximations based on caseback stamps and surviving examples, not Rolex factory records. Watches near any transition point can blur the expected specification.

genre approx. years quick tell why it matters
Explorer dial 1962–1965 3-6-9 numerals on an early gilt dial rare special branch, usually linked to UK-market examples
Underline / Double Swiss Underline 1963–1964 underline print and early pointed crown-guard context narrow transitional window around the radium-to-tritium change
Open chapter ring gilt 1964–1966 gloss gilt dial with open outer minute track main late-gilt commercial branch
Bart Simpson around 1966 wide, flat coronet in late gilt production most recognisable late-gilt subtype
Meters-first matte 1966–1970 depth rating reads 200m before 660ft first matte generation
Serif / non-serif matte 1970–1976 feet-first matte dial with marker and font diagnostics core middle run of the reference
Pre COMEX 1976–1977 fat coronet and unusual "=" placement brief bridge between standard matte and Maxi dials
Maxi Mk I–V 1977–1984 larger lume plots and mark-specific text alignment most collected late-matte subgroup
Late gloss 1984–1990 gloss dial with white-gold surrounds bridge into the modern Submariner look

Explorer dial (approx. 1962–1965)

Explorer-dial 5513
Explorer-dial 5513

Explorer-dial 5513 examples exist from the earliest production run and are among the most sought-after 5513 variants. The layout replaces the standard rectangular lume plots at 3, 6, and 9 o'clock with the Arabic numerals 3, 6, and 9 — borrowed directly from the Explorer — while keeping slim luminous batons at the remaining hours. Dial text is reduced in size to give the numerals room.

Stephen Pulvirent's Hodinkee Reference Points piece on the Submariner notes that Explorer-dial Submariners "seemed to have been made for the UK market"; the UK concentration has never been conclusively explained. Most surviving examples came from UK distribution channels, and Explorer-dial 5512 examples from the same period share the same UK-market skew. For rarity context: Phillips has sold only 15 Explorer-dial Submariner examples across all references (6200, 6538, 5510, 5512, 5513) combined. Fifteen total.

Underline (approx. 1963–1964)

Underline 5513
Underline 5513
Double Swiss underline 5513
Double Swiss underline 5513

Certain early gilt 5513 dials carry an underline (a short printed line) just below the depth rating and "Submariner" text at six o'clock. These are transitional pieces that appear across several Rolex sport references in the same period; the marking is a Rolex-wide production phenomenon. Most Underline 5513 examples also carry Cornino (pointed) crown guards, consistent with their position in early production.

Double Swiss Underline (approx. 1963)

A rarer sub-variant of the Underline. Here the underline sits beneath the Rolex signature at 12 o'clock rather than at 6 o'clock, and the dial carries two "Swiss" text printings at the bottom: one gilt, in line with an open chapter ring, and one white just below it. The Double Swiss phenomenon appears across multiple Rolex references from this period. The Double Swiss Underline 5513 is documented in collector literature as among the last 5513 examples to feature pointed (Cornino) crown guards, which sets the crown guard transition to rounded guards at approximately 1963 for the 5513.

Gilt, Open Chapter Ring (approx. 1964–1966)

Open chapter ring 5513
Open chapter ring 5513

Once the Underline and Double Swiss variants are past, the main gilt 5513 body uses an open chapter ring: the gilt hash marks around the dial perimeter are not connected by a solid ring on the outer edge. The openness is the visual diagnostic. The outer perimeter of the minute track shows either hash marks that float free or hash marks that connect into a closed band. No underline, no exclamation marks. These are the cleanest, most straightforward early gilt 5513 examples.

Bart Simpson (approx. 1966, serials approximately 1.4M–1.5M)

Late gilt production brings what the collector community and auction catalogues call the Bart Simpson dial. The Rolex coronet reads as a Bart Simpson face in silhouette, with wider points, and the deep yellow color from late galvanic gilt metallurgy amplifies the cartoon resemblance. Typical serial range is 1.4M to 1.5M, with examples appearing as early as 1.3M and as late as 1.6M. Bart Simpson 5512 examples also exist but are much rarer by volume.

Beyond the coronet shape, the Bart Simpson dial has several authentication details that distinguish it from the classic coronet gilt dial that immediately preceded it:

  • The "L" in ROLEX sits to the left of center, underneath the coronet.
  • The "P" in PERPETUAL falls directly under the extended part of the serif on the "L" in ROLEX.
  • In the depth rating, the "2" and "0" align directly over the "S" and "U" in SUBMARINER.
  • The 6s in the depth rating are open.
  • The horizontal bars of the "f" and "t" in "ft" are aligned (co-linear).

The classic coronet gilt dial that immediately precedes the Bart Simpson (typically in the 1.1M to 1.3M serial range, with examples in the very late 1.0M range) differs on several of these points:

  • The "P" in PERPETUAL sits farther to the left, positioned underneath the "L" in ROLEX rather than under the serif extension.
  • The shape of the letter "S" in SUBMARINER is distinctly different from the Bart Simpson version.
  • The horizontal bars of the "f" and "t" in "ft" are not aligned.
  • The coronet itself has cleaner, more defined lines compared to the Bart Simpson's wider, flatter points.

Some overlap exists during the transition between the classic coronet and the Bart Simpson dial. The classic coronet dial is also commonly seen with an underline in serial ranges corresponding to 1963.

Matte, Meters First (approx. 1966–1970, serials approximately 1.6M to 2.2M)

Flat tritium
Flat tritium (late)
Dome tritium
Dome tritium (mid)
Thin tritium
Thin tritium (early)
SWISS T<25 spanning five hash marks
SWISS T<25 spanning five hash marks
Meters first depth rating detail
Meters first depth rating detail
Meters first dial detail
Meters first dial detail

The transition from gilt-gloss to meters-first matte dials started around the 1.6M serial range (approximately 1966). By serial 1.7M (1968), the meters-first matte dial was in full production. The depth rating puts metric units first ("200m = 660ft"), which is why collectors call them meters-first. The shift to feet-first depth ratings overlaps in the 2.2M serial range (late 1969 to early 1970), where both meters-first and feet-first dials appear.

Authentication details for the Meters First dial:

  • The "L" in "ROLEX" has very little if any serif on top and is centered under the coronet.
  • The 6s in the depth rating are semi-open: the top of the 6 appears rotated a couple of degrees clockwise (may require a 10x loupe to confirm).
  • The "S" in "SUBMARINER" has a characteristic shape: the top part is straight across, and the middle horizontal portion sits closer to the top than the bottom.
  • "SWISS - T < 25" at the bottom of the dial spans five minute hash marks. This is wider than subsequent matte dials, which span only three hash marks. (A short run of 5512 meters-first matte dials had "SWISS - T < 25" across only three hash marks, but no 5513 example with this narrower spacing is known.)

Tritium application varies across the meters-first production run: early examples have a very thin layer of tritium that can appear very white and may be hard to detect without a loupe; mid-production examples show more dome-like tritium plots; late production examples have tritium applied in a flat layer, similar to the style used throughout the 1970s.

Non-serif, first run (late 1969–1970, serials approximately early 2.0M)

Serif vs non-serif timeline
Serif vs non-serif timeline
Serif hour marker flair
Serif hour marker flair
Non-serif hour marker corners
Non-serif hour marker corners

The first non-serif dials appear in the very early 2.0M serial range (late 1969 to early 1970), immediately following the meters-first dials. The depth rating switches to feet first ("660ft = 200m"). The "=" sign sits above and slightly to the right of the "A" in "SUBMARINER." "SUBMARINER" is printed below the depth rating. The 6s in the depth rating are open.

The non-serif dial is identified by the corners of the 3, 6, and 9 o'clock hour markers, which form perfect 90-degree angles with no extensions or flair. The middle horizontal stroke of the "E" in "ROLEX" has an abundance of serif at its end. The "P" in "PERPETUAL" is shifted to the left relative to the "L" in "ROLEX" above it.

Serif (1970–1973, serials approximately early/mid 2.0M to late 3.0M/early 4.0M)

Serif dials introduce small extensions (sharp points or "flair") at the corners of the 3, 6, and 9 o'clock hour markers. This is the distinguishing feature from the non-serif dial. The middle horizontal stroke of the "E" in "ROLEX" has no serif at its end, the opposite of the non-serif dial. The depth rating remains feet first, with the "=" sign above and slightly to the right of the "A" in "SUBMARINER." "SUBMARINER" is printed below the depth rating.

Tritium was hand-applied and can cover the serif extensions on hour markers, making a Serif dial look like a Non-serif. When the hour markers are ambiguous, the "E" in "ROLEX" resolves it: abundance of serif on the middle stroke means non-serif dial; no serif on the middle stroke means serif dial.

The Serif dial is the most common early-to-mid matte genre and the one most collectors picture when they think of a matte 5513.

Non-serif, second run (1973–1976, serials approximately late 3.0M to early/mid 5.0M)

The dial printing returns to non-serif text in the mid-1970s. The transition back from serif to non-serif began in the late 3.0M serial range. This second non-serif phase runs until the Pre COMEX dial appears in the early-to-mid 5.0M range. The same hour-marker and "E" in "ROLEX" diagnostics apply as in the first non-serif run.

Pre COMEX (approx. 1976–1977, serials approximately 5.0M)

Pre COMEX dial detail
Pre COMEX dial detail
Pre COMEX text detail
Pre COMEX text detail

The term "Pre COMEX" was coined by Ed Delgado on the Vintage Rolex Forum on October 24, 2008, to describe dials with characteristics very similar to some COMEX 5514 dials. This dial sits between the second non-serif run and the Maxi I.

Authentication details:

  • The coronet is somewhat smudgy and noticeably fat at the bottom, wider than the Maxi I coronet that follows.
  • The top of the "L" in "ROLEX" has a tremendous amount of serif and sits to the left of center under the coronet.
  • The 6s in the depth rating are open.
  • The "=" sign in the depth rating sits above and to the left of center of the "A" in "SUBMARINER," a key differentiator from other matte dials where it sits to the right or directly above.
  • "SUBMARINER" is printed below the depth rating.
  • The "S" in "SUBMARINER" has a normal appearance (not the zig-zag shape seen on Maxi I and IV).

Quick identification: a smudge-like coronet with an "L" with abundant serif underneath, depth rating above "SUBMARINER," and the "=" sign above and slightly to the left of the "A." That combination identifies a Pre COMEX dial.

Maxi MK I through MK V (1977–1984)

Maxi V dial
Maxi V dial
Maxi IV dial
Maxi IV dial
Maxi III lollipop dial
Maxi III lollipop dial
Maxi II dial
Maxi II dial
Maxi I dial
Maxi I dial
5513 Maxi dial
5513 Maxi dial
5513 Maxi dial detail
5513 Maxi dial detail

The Maxi era introduces noticeably larger lume plots and bolder printing. The name "Maxi" was carried over from the 16610LV introduced in 2003 and applied retroactively to these earlier large-plot dials. Collectors break the Maxi phase into five marks, MK I through MK V, based on lume plot size, text position, and specific typographic details. All Maxi dials have coronets that are narrower at the bottom than the Serif and Pre COMEX dials. All Maxi dials have open 6s in the depth rating. All Maxi dials except the Maxi I have "SUBMARINER" printed above the depth rating.

Two identifiers recur across Maxi dials and serve as quick sorting tools:

The "=" sign position relative to the "A" in SUBMARINER sorts Maxi I through V quickly: Maxi I has it directly above the "A"; Maxi II directly below and in the middle of the "A"; Maxi III uses the "200m" alignment instead, with the two 0s in "200m" lining up under the "N" and "E" of "SUBMARINER"; Maxi IV directly below the "A" but shifted slightly to the right; Maxi V directly below and in the middle of the "A."

The "S" shape in "SUBMARINER" is the second quick sort. A zig-zag S (resembling a backwards capital Z) appears on Maxi I and Maxi IV. A normal S appears on Maxi II, Maxi III, and Maxi V.

MK I (1977–1978, serials early/mid 5.0M to early 6.0M): The last matte dial with "SUBMARINER" printed below the depth rating. Tritium hour plots are very large but do not touch the minute marks. The coronet is tapered and slender at the bottom, a key distinction from the preceding Pre COMEX's fat coronet. Carries the zig-zag S in "SUBMARINER." The "=" sign sits directly above the "A" in "SUBMARINER."

MK II (1978, serials 5.0M to early 6.0M): The first matte dial with "SUBMARINER" printed above the depth rating. "SUBMARINER" is shorter in length than the depth rating below it. The "f" in the depth rating lacks serif. Normal "S" in "SUBMARINER." The "=" sign sits directly below and in the middle of the "A."

MK III (approximately 1978, serials 5.0M to 6.0M): Large tritium hour plots that often appear to touch the five-minute hash marks (nicknamed "lollipop"), though under magnification they do not always make contact. "SUBMARINER" above the depth rating and shorter in length. Large open 6s. The "f" in the depth rating has a distinctive serif. The two 0s in "200m" line up directly underneath the "N" and "E" in "SUBMARINER."

MK IV (approximately 1981, serials late 6.0M to late 7.0M): "SUBMARINER" above the depth rating and shorter in length. Shares the zig-zag S with Maxi I. The "=" sign sits directly below the "A" but shifted slightly to the right, distinguishing it from Maxi II where it is centered.

MK V (serials 7.0M to 8.0M, through approximately 1984): "SUBMARINER" printed above the depth rating, but unlike Maxi II–IV, the "SUBMARINER" text is longer than the depth rating below it — a unique characteristic among Maxi dials. Open 6s. The "f" in the depth rating lacks serif. The "=" sign sits directly below and in the middle of the "A." Production continued until approximately 1984 when the black gloss dial with white-gold surrounds was introduced.

Gloss (1984–1990)

The final 5513 dials return to a glossy finish, but with white-gold surrounds around the hour markers rather than the gilt printing of the early era. This is the late gloss phase that bridges the acrylic-crystal 5513 and the later modern Submariner world. Gloss 5513 dials are visually distinct from everything that came before and sit in their own collecting lane.

Dial map

Collectors usually split the 5513 into four families: early gilt, late-gilt Bart Simpson, the long matte middle, and late gloss. Named sub-variants live inside those families.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

The 5513 case form stays stable across the run: a 40mm crown-guard case, acrylic crystal, and rotating dive bezel. The case changes less than the dial. Most of the hard originality work sits in inserts, crowns, and later service parts.

Crown guard transition

The first 5513s start with pointed Cornino crown guards inherited from the 5512. Rounded guards take over by the mid-1960s and stay there through the rest of the run. The shift covers a transition zone of overlapping production rather than a single dated cutover.

Dial originality and service dials

The dial is the biggest originality trap on the 5513. Long production and hard service life mean correct dials, later service dials, and outright bad dials all circulate on honest-looking cases.

Matte 5513 dials from the 1970s and 1980s are frequent service-replacement territory. Font weight, text sizing, and depth-rating format should all match the case period. A dial that looks too fresh for the case deserves scrutiny.

Maxi dials attract premiums, so they attract replacement and misidentified parts too. The mark has to match the serial-era logic, lume plot size, and text arrangement.

The lower dial text is one of the easier cross-checks. A case and dial from different eras often give themselves away here.

Early gilt 5513 dials carry the same premium and the same risk as early 5512 dials. Coronet shape, chapter-ring style, and print character all have to match the period.

The dial deserves its own pass against the case. Bracelet drift is common on long-run references; dial drift carries more weight on the 5513 because the matte and Maxi premiums sit on the dial itself.

Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes

Meters-first matte 5513 on Oyster bracelet
Meters-first matte 5513 on Oyster bracelet
Late gloss 5513 on Oyster bracelet
Late gloss 5513 on Oyster bracelet
bracelet end links note
7206 80 early rivet-era fitment
9315 280 or 380 documented by the early 1970s
93150 580 late-run fitment and common later replacement

The table is a fitment map. A clasp code dates the bracelet rather than the watch head, and bracelet swaps across the long run are common.

USA-market C+I (Credit et Industrie) bracelets used hollow rivets while Swiss-market bracelets used solid pins. The distinction matters for authentication and feel, but not every surviving watch still carries its original bracelet.

Surviving 5513s frequently turn up with later 93150 bracelets, much later clasp stamps, and other mixed service parts. Packaging tracks the sale period and market rather than the reference number itself.

Special branches

Military-engraved 5513 caseback example
Military-engraved 5513 caseback example
Commercial 5513 on Oyster bracelet
Commercial 5513 on Oyster bracelet
Early gilt 5513 on strap
Early gilt 5513 on strap
Spider-dial 5513 example
Spider-dial 5513 example

Explorer dial

The Explorer-dial branch sits inside the early gilt run as a distinct collecting line. The dial-timeline section above covers the 3-6-9 layout and the UK-market skew; the provenance below anchors both.

Sotheby's 2020 Lot 377 carried a family-owned 1964 watch with caliber 1530, UK Garrard guarantee dated 1965, and later service papers. The Garrard provenance supports both the UK-market thesis and the date range.

MilSub

MilSub 5513
MilSub 5513
MilSub 5513 detail
MilSub 5513 detail

British military 5513 work belongs in its own branch. Collectors shorten "military Submariner" to MilSub. Documented examples include both a South African Army-associated 5513 and a sold 1974 military 5513, which shows both non-British military use and the messy service life of issued watches. The British military designation for the 5513 MilSub was W10, the NATO stock classification for military-issue wristwatches.

Rolex Forum research has documented additional military and institutional procurement branches. Chilean Navy examples are marked "Propriedad Armada de Chile" (Property of the Chilean Navy) on the caseback, confirming South American naval procurement beyond the better-known Argentine Navy 5514 COMEX connection. The New Zealand Fisheries Research Division purchased 14 Submariners for research divers, a small institutional order that places the 5513 in a scientific-research context alongside its military and commercial diving roles.

One distinction Rolex Forum collectors emphasize: US Navy SEALs were issued Tudor Submariners, not Rolex Submariners. The SEAL-Rolex association is a common misconception. The Tudor connection is well documented in military procurement records, while Rolex Submariners went to the British Royal Navy (as the 5517) and various other naval forces through standard procurement channels.

Historical market and auction record

The market spread is wide because the 5513 spans common commercial watches, rare dial branches, and military provenance. Standard late-matte and gloss examples remain readily available; the branch watches do not. Late-1960s US retail pricing ran around $160–$175.

Auction results sort the reference into clear lanes. Explorer-dial, military, and strong early-gilt watches sit well above ordinary late commercial examples. Standard commercial 5513s are plentiful; Bart Simpson, early gilt, and cleaner full-set examples pull into a higher lane quickly.

Mixed-parts watches are common. Documented spider-dial and bracelet-focused 5513 examples show replacement dials, inserts, crowns, later bracelets, and much later clasp stamps sitting together on one otherwise honest watch. Spider dial refers to a glossy dial with lacquer crazing; the effect turns up across a broad late-vintage band rather than a single year.

Sources

Named contributors: Research by Beaumont Miller II (5513mattedial.com), with acknowledged contributions from Marcello Pisani, Jedly, and Tomvox. The Maxi dial taxonomy draws on Tomvox's 2008 research. The "Pre COMEX" dial designation was coined by Ed Delgado on the Vintage Rolex Forum (October 24, 2008).

Related references

The 5513 sits inside the 5xxx Submariner family alongside the chronometer 5512 and the institutional 5514 and 5517. Two military and commercial branches use the 5513 case as their host: the COMEX program (Compagnie Maritime d'Expertises) issued 5513s to French saturation divers from the early 1970s, and the British military MilSub configuration ran on 5513 cases for the first two batches before the dedicated 5517 took over in the third.