Reference:unicorn-daytona: Difference between revisions

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{{#seo:
{{#seo:
|title=Rolex Unicorn Daytona 6265 18k White Gold, Phillips CHF 5.9M — BezelBase
|title=Rolex unicorn-daytona Production, Dial Variants, Serial Ranges | BezelBase
|description=The Unicorn Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 6265 — the only known 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona. Case 2877587, manufactured 1970, delivered 1971 to a German retailer. Sold CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum, Geneva, 12 May 2018. Authenticity disputed in Perezcope's 2022 Frankenstein dossier citing 2010 photographs and millerighe pusher forensics.
|description=The Unicorn Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 6265 — the only known 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona. Case 2877587, manufactured 1970, delivered 1971 to a German retailer. Sold CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum, Geneva, 12 May 2018. Authenticity disputed in Perezcope's 2022 Frankenstein dossier citing 2010 photographs and millerighe pusher forensics.
|keywords=Unicorn Daytona, Unicorn 6265, white gold 6265, Rolex Unicorn, Phillips Daytona Ultimatum, Perezcope Unicorn Frankenstein, Goldberger Unicorn, CHF 5,937,500
|keywords=Unicorn Daytona, Unicorn 6265, white gold 6265, Rolex Unicorn, Phillips Daytona Ultimatum, Perezcope Unicorn Frankenstein, Goldberger Unicorn, CHF 5,937,500
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|og_type=article
|og_type=article
|published_time=2026-04-19T14:53:15Z
|published_time=2026-04-19T14:53:15Z
|modified_time=2026-04-23T16:13:19Z
|modified_time=2026-04-29T02:51:59Z
|robots=index,follow,max-image-preview:large
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The Unicorn is the only known 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona. It is a one-off special-order [[Reference:6265|6265]], case 2877587, made in 1970 and delivered in 1971 to a German retailer. Phillips sold it at Daytona Ultimatum in 2018 for CHF 5,937,500 including premium. Perezcope's 2022 dossier disputes the watch as sold at Phillips and argues for a Frankenstein assembled from period-correct and replacement parts. Both readings remain on the record.
The Unicorn is the only known 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona. It is a one-off special-order [[Reference:6265|6265]], case 2877587, made in 1970 and delivered in 1971 to a German retailer. Phillips sold it at Daytona Ultimatum in 2018 for CHF 5,937,500 including premium. Perezcope's 2022 dossier disputes the watch as sold at Phillips and argues for a Frankenstein assembled from period-correct and replacement parts. Both readings remain on the record.


[[File:Ref 6265 unicorn-hero.webp|thumb|right|340px|alt=The Unicorn 6265 — 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona, Sigma dial with white gold indices, CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum 2018|The Unicorn 6265 — 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona, Sigma dial with white gold indices, CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum 2018]]
[[File:Ref 6265 unicorn-hero.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=The Unicorn 6265 — 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona, Sigma dial with white gold indices, CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum 2018|The Unicorn 6265 — 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona, Sigma dial with white gold indices, CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum 2018]]


== What the Unicorn is ==
== What the Unicorn is ==
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[[Category:Daytona]]
[[Category:Daytona]]
[[Category:Daytona Manual-wind]]
[[Category:Daytona Manual-Wind]]
[[Category:Disputed variant]]
[[Category:Disputed variant]]

Latest revision as of 04:23, 30 April 2026


Daytona -> 6265Unicorn

The Unicorn (Daytona 6265 in 18k white gold)

The Unicorn is the only known 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona. It is a one-off special-order 6265, case 2877587, made in 1970 and delivered in 1971 to a German retailer. Phillips sold it at Daytona Ultimatum in 2018 for CHF 5,937,500 including premium. Perezcope's 2022 dossier disputes the watch as sold at Phillips and argues for a Frankenstein assembled from period-correct and replacement parts. Both readings remain on the record.

The Unicorn 6265 — 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona, Sigma dial with white gold indices, CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum 2018
The Unicorn 6265 — 18k white gold manual-wind Daytona, Sigma dial with white gold indices, CHF 5,937,500 at Phillips Daytona Ultimatum 2018

What the Unicorn is

Four facts about the Unicorn that set it apart from every other 6265:

The Unicorn has four practical markers.

  • 18k white gold case, unique within the manual-wind Daytona line.
  • Case number 2877587, placing it in Rolex's 1970 production band.
  • Documented 1971 delivery to Germany.
  • A Sigma dial on a case number that predates the usual Sigma window, which is one reason the watch stays under forensic scrutiny.

The Phillips sale (12 May 2018)

Phillips Daytona Ultimatum was a 32-watch thematic sale curated by Pucci Papaleo with Aurel Bacs at the rostrum. The Unicorn was Lot 8 and the headline lot of the auction. Phillips's lot essay framed the watch as the authentic sole white gold 6265, with the dial, pushers, and bezel disclosed as period-correct service replacements sourced by Goldberger during his ownership. The watch hammered at CHF 5,400,000 with buyer's premium bringing the all-in price to CHF 5,937,500 — about USD 5.9M at prevailing exchange.

The sale placed the Unicorn at second on the all-time Rolex auction list at that date, behind only Paul Newman's own 6239 (USD 17.52M at Phillips Winning Icons, October 2017). The broader Daytona Ultimatum sale reset the market ceiling across manual-wind Daytona collecting and established Phillips as the canonical auction house for thematic Rolex sales.

Ownership history

The Unicorn's ownership chain is, per Phillips's lot essay and Goldberger's published accounts:

- Manufactured 1970, Rolex Geneva - Delivered 1971 to a German retailer, sold to a first retail buyer - Surfaced in collector circulation in the 2000s - Acquired by John Goldberger (Auro Montanari, Italian collector and author of 100 Superlative Rolex Watches) - Held by Goldberger through the 2010s; service work documented in period including the Sigma dial swap cited in Phillips's essay - Consigned to Phillips, May 2018 - Sold to a private buyer at the 2018 sale; ownership since has not been publicly re-surfaced

The Perezcope dispute (December 2022)

Jose Pereztroika's December 2022 dossier — "Rolex Daytona 6265 The Unicorn Frankenstein plot" — disputes the Unicorn's authenticity as presented at Phillips. The dossier's core evidence:

2010 Newoldschlock Instagram photographs

An anonymous Instagram account ("newoldschlock") posted 2010 photographs of case 2877587 — the same white gold 6265 case the Unicorn carries — with a different dial, different pushers, and a different bezel from what appeared at Phillips in 2018. The 2010 photographs show the case wearing a steel tachymetre bezel, steel screw-down pushers, and a black dial without Sigma markings. The 2018 configuration — white gold bezel, millerighe-knurled white gold pushers, Sigma dial — differs on all three points.

Per Perezcope, this contradicts Phillips's framing of "period-correct service replacements sourced by Goldberger" — the photographs document that the current configuration was assembled after 2010, not retained from the 1971 delivery.

Millerighe pusher forensics

The 2018 configuration's white gold millerighe-knurled pushers are, per Perezcope's analysis, inconsistent in shape, refinement, and burr pattern with authentic single-source Rolex millerighe pushers of the period. The knurl pattern, the top-face chamfer, and the burr at the base all read as non-Rolex — consistent with a later third-party fabrication rather than original or period-correct service-replacement Rolex parts.

Sigma dial chronology

The Sigma dial convention is dated, per Perezcope's own forensic database, to around case number 3.0 million — roughly 1972. The Unicorn case 2877587 predates that by about one million serials. A Sigma dial on a 2877587 case reads as an anachronism — the dial type did not exist when this case was manufactured.

Cal 727 movement stamp

Perezcope flags that the Unicorn's cal 727 movement carries an older "7-2-7" hyphenated stamp on a serial range where neighbouring movements already use the newer cleaner "727" stamp. A cal 727 with the wrong stamp style for its case-number neighbourhood reads as a movement that has been swapped or assembled from older parts.

Phillips's position and Goldberger's framing

Phillips's 2018 lot essay disclosed that the dial, pushers, and bezel were not the original 1971 delivery components — Phillips presented them as period-correct service replacements sourced by Goldberger during his ownership. The essay positioned the Unicorn as authentic-Rolex with service-period-appropriate parts, not as a fully original-delivery watch.

Goldberger has publicly treated the Unicorn as the last known white gold 6265, and the replacement components as period-correct parts fitted for display and preservation. Phillips and Goldberger's combined framing is that the core case (2877587 in 18k white gold) is unquestionably authentic Rolex and the sole documented white gold 6265, regardless of the post-1971 dial/bezel/pusher replacement history.

Perezcope's counter is that even accepting the case as authentic, the assembled Unicorn as it sold at Phillips in 2018 is not a single coherent Rolex watch — it is a Frankenstein. The millerighe pushers are not period-correct service replacements; the Sigma dial is an anachronism; the movement stamp reads as period-mismatched.

Why the dispute matters

Both positions stay on the record. The market will continue to catalogue the Unicorn's Phillips result as the canonical price for the variant; collectors will form their own authentication positions on the Frankenstein question. Similar forensic disputes sit on three other high-value Daytona variants — Albino 6263, Neanderthal 6240, and the 116520 bracelet 78490/78690 reading — with Perezcope as the consistent second voice raising post-sale forensic questions.

Relation to other 6265 variants

The Unicorn is one of several rare precious-metal 6265 configurations:

- 18k white gold (Unicorn) — 1, documented - 18k yellow gold — several, common enough to command a premium over steel but not a one-off - 14k yellow gold — smaller number, North American market specification - 950 platinum — handful documented, each catalogued on specific provenance - Lemon dial in gold or platinum — separate sub-branch; see 6265 article

Where to go next

- Reference 6265 — full treatment of the host reference, all Paul Newman variants, Sultan of Oman Khanjar, Lemon dial, and retailer-signed examples - Paul Newman Daytona — the exotic-dial category the Unicorn sits adjacent to - Albino Daytona — the parallel disputed variant in the manual-wind category - Daytona glossary — definitions for every named variant

Source list