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|title=Rolex Submariner 16610 — BezelBase
|title=Rolex 16610 Submariner — Production, Dial Variants, Serial Ranges | BezelBase
|description=The 16610 is the standard Submariner of its era — the reference most people picture when they say "Submariner." It entered production around 1988,…
|description=The 16610 is the standard Submariner of its era — the reference most people picture when they say "Submariner." It entered production around 1988,…
|keywords=Rolex, 16610, Submariner, specifications, reference guide
|keywords=Rolex, 16610, Submariner, specifications, reference guide
|image=Ref 16610 hero.jpg
|image_alt=Rolex Submariner Ref. 16610
|type=article
|type=article
|og_type=article
|published_time=2026-04-14T16:12:48Z
|modified_time=2026-04-29T02:47:35Z
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<small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] -> '''16610'''</small>


<small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] → '''16610'''</small>
The 16610 is the standard Submariner of its era, the reference most people picture when they say "Submariner." It entered production around 1988, replacing the 16800, and ran until 2010 when the ceramic-bezel 116610LN took over. That is roughly 23 years on a single reference number. No other Submariner Date reference comes close: the 16800 lasted about eight years, the 116610LN ten. The 16610 ran for more than two decades while the rest of the Rolex sports line moved around it, accumulating small specification changes that reward careful inspection.


[[File:Ref 16610 hero.jpg|thumb|right|300px]]
Across that span the 16610 worked through three lume technologies, two bracelet systems, and a sequence of anti-counterfeiting measures, all without a new reference number. Caliber 3135 stayed put.
[[File:Ref 16610 detail.jpg|thumb|right|300px]]


The 16610 is the standard Submariner of its era — the reference most people picture when they say “Submariner.” It entered production around 1988, replacing the 16800, and ran until 2010 when the ceramic-bezel 116610LN took over. That is approximately 23 years on a single reference number. No other Submariner Date reference comes close. The 16800 ran about eight years. The 116610LN ran ten. The 16610 ran more than two decades while everything around it changed, and it changed with the times in ways that reward careful attention.
<span id="core-facts"></span>


Across those 23 years, the 16610 accumulated a full generational history within a single reference number: three lume technologies, two bracelet systems, a bezel insert that aged from glossy to matte, and a progression of anti-counterfeiting measures that mark out the late production examples. Caliber 3135 never changed.
[[File:Ref 16610 hero.jpg|thumb|right|250px|alt=Rolex Submariner Ref. 16610|Rolex Submariner Ref. 16610]]


<span id="core-facts"></span>
== Core facts ==
== Core facts ==


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| bezel
| bezel
| unidirectional 60-click, black aluminum insert
| unidirectional 60-click, black aluminum insert
|-
| bezel clicks
| 120-click unidirectional (each click = half a minute)
|-
|-
| bracelet (early)
| bracelet (early)
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== Where it sits in the line ==
== Where it sits in the line ==


The 16610 follows the transitional 16800 and precedes the 116610LN. Where the 16800 introduced sapphire crystal and the 300m rating to the date Submariner, the 16610 settled the platform caliber 3135, definitive Triplock crown, Oyster case, graduated 60-click aluminum bezel insert and kept it there for over two decades. The broader public associates the 16610 with the Submariner Date because it was in production for so long, in such volume, and looked so consistent.
The 16610 follows the transitional 16800 and precedes the 116610LN. The 16800 had introduced sapphire crystal and the 300m rating to the date Submariner; the 16610 settled the platform around caliber 3135, the definitive Triplock crown, the 40mm Oyster case, and the graduated 60-click aluminum bezel insert, and held that specification for over two decades. The broader public associates the Submariner Date with the 16610 because it ran for so long, in such volume, and looked so consistent.


It ran alongside the no-date 14060 and 14060M. Together, these references represent the five-digit Submariner era. The 16610 is the date version; the 14060 / 14060M is the no-date version. Same case, same bracelet architecture, many of the same specification milestones.
It ran alongside the no-date 14060 and 14060M. Together those references make up the five-digit Submariner era. Same case, same bracelet architecture, many of the same specification milestones; the 16610 carries the date, the 14060 / 14060M does not.


The 16610 also spawned the 16610LV anniversary variant (the “Kermit,” covered in its own article) in 2003. The relationship matters: the 16610LV uses the identical case and movement, differing only in its green aluminum bezel insert and Maxi dial.
The 16610 also spawned the 16610LV anniversary variant, the "Kermit," in 2003. The Kermit uses an identical case and movement, differing only in its green aluminum bezel insert and Maxi dial.


<span id="timeline-of-changes-through-the-23-year-run"></span>
<span id="production-outline"></span>
== Timeline of changes through the 23-year run ==
== Production outline ==


The 16610’s long production created distinct phases. These phases do not align cleanly with decade boundaries and the transitions are approximate.
The 16610's long production splits into five loosely-bounded phases. Transition points are approximate and do not align with calendar decades.


<span id="phase-1-early-production-tritium-dials-drilled-lugs-stamped-end-links-1988late-1990s"></span>
<span id="phase-1-early-production-tritium-dials-drilled-lugs-stamped-end-links-1988late-1990s"></span>
=== Phase 1 — Early production: tritium dials, drilled lugs, stamped end links (~1988–late 1990s) ===
=== Phase 1 — Early production: tritium dials, drilled lugs, stamped end links (~1988–late 1990s) ===


'''Approximate serial range: pre-X through X series'''
Serial range: pre-X through X series.
 
The earliest 16610 examples are the closest in character to the preceding 16800. They carry:


* '''Tritium lume''' — dials marked T SWISS T or T&lt;25 near 6 o’clock. Tritium has a 12.3-year half-life; after 20–30 years, the lume ranges from lightly patinated to heavily aged, with cream, tan, or orange tones that collectors refer to as “tropical.
The earliest 16610 examples sit closest in character to the preceding 16800. Dials carry tritium lume marked T SWISS T or T<25 near 6 o'clock; tritium has a 12.3-year half-life, so on a 20- to 30-year-old dial the lume runs from light patination to the deep cream, tan, and orange tones collectors call tropical. Lug holes drill straight through the case, allowing strap changes without tools. The bracelet is ref.93150 with stamped hollow 501B end links and a stamped Fliplock clasp with wetsuit extension. The rehaut stays smooth and unengraved throughout the phase.
* '''Drilled lug holes''' — through-holes in the case lugs, allowing strap changes without tools. Present from the beginning of the run.
* '''Stamped 501B end links''' — hollow, stamped steel end links on bracelet ref.93150. Thinner and lighter than the solid end links that replaced them.
* '''Stamped Fliplock clasp''' — the older-style stamped hollow clasp with diver’s wetsuit extension.
* '''Unengraved rehaut''' — the inner bezel ring is smooth throughout this phase.


This is the version most closely connected to the vintage Submariner tradition. The early 16610 feels like an update of the same watch that started with the 5513, not a departure from it.
This is the 16610 at its most vintage-adjacent. The early watch reads as an update of the specification that started with the 5513 rather than a departure from it.


<span id="phase-2-luminova-transition-19982001"></span>
<span id="phase-2-luminova-transition-19982001"></span>
=== Phase 2 — Luminova transition (~1998–2001) ===
=== Phase 2 — Luminova transition (~1998–2001) ===


'''Approximate serial range: A to P series (~1998–2000)'''
Serial range: A to P series (roughly 1998 to 2000).
 
A brief window exists between the full tritium era and the settled Luminova era. Dials marked SWISS only — without the T prefix — appear as the lume changeover happened. Collectors call these Swiss-only dials, a minor transitional variant.


Around 1998–1999, Rolex switched to Luminova lume on the 16610. Late dials drop the tritium markings and read SWISS MADE at 6 o’clock. Luminova glows green-white rather than the warm orange-yellow of aged tritium and does not patinate the same way. The visual character of the watch changes.
A short window sits between the full tritium era and the settled Luminova era. Dials marked SWISS only, without the T prefix, appear during the lume changeover. Collectors call these Swiss-only dials, and they are a minor but tracked transitional variant.


The transition was not instantaneous — some P-series 16610s have tritium; some A-series have Luminova. The 93150 bracelet with stamped end links remained during this period, keeping the overall feel of the early generation despite the lume change.
Around 1998–1999 Rolex switched to Luminova on the 16610. Late dials drop the tritium markings entirely and read SWISS MADE at 6 o'clock. Luminova glows green-white rather than the warm orange-yellow of aged tritium and does not patinate the same way, which gives the late watch a different visual character on the wrist.


The serial band approximations above are collector-documented rather than Rolex-confirmed.
The transition was not instantaneous. Some P-series 16610s still carry tritium and some A-series already wear Luminova. The 93150 bracelet with stamped end links remained in place through this period, keeping the overall feel of the early generation despite the lume change.


<span id="phase-3-sel-upgrade-2001"></span>
<span id="phase-3-sel-upgrade-2001"></span>
=== Phase 3 — SEL upgrade (~2001) ===
=== Phase 3 — SEL upgrade (~2001) ===


'''Approximate serial range: Y series (~2001–2002)'''
Serial range: Y series (roughly 2001 to 2002).


Around 2001, Rolex replaced the stamped 501B end links with solid Super End Links (SEL code 93250) on the 16610. A significant tactile and structural change. The SEL bracelet is heavier, more rigid, and sits differently against the case. It also affects the visual proportion — SEL fills the lug gap more completely than the older stamped end links.
Around 2001 Rolex replaced the stamped 501B end links with solid Super End Links (SEL, code 93250). The change is tactile as much as visual: the SEL bracelet is heavier, more rigid, and fills the lug gap more completely than the older stamped end links. Luminova was upgraded to Super-Luminova at about the same time, improving brightness and longevity.


A 16610 with Y serial or later should have SEL. A pre-Y serial with SEL may have had a bracelet upgrade; a Y+ serial with 501B is unusual and worth verifying. Luminova was upgraded to '''Super-Luminova''' around this same period, improving brightness and longevity further.
A 16610 with Y serial or later should carry SEL. A pre-Y serial fitted with SEL has probably had a bracelet upgrade. A Y-plus serial with 501B is unusual and worth verifying against the physical parts.


'''Y-serial collector highlight''': Y-serial 16610 examples (~2001–2002) are specifically prized because they represent the overlap window where SEL had arrived but drilled lug holes had not yet been removed (lug holes were eliminated around the F serial in 2003). A Y-serial 16610 with both SEL and drilled lugs combines the upgraded bracelet with the heritage case detail a configuration that existed for only a brief production window. Rolex Forum collectors track this combination as a distinct desirability tier within the reference.
Y-serial examples (about 2001–2002) are prized for the overlap they capture: SEL had arrived but the drilled lug holes had not yet been removed. A Y-serial 16610 with both SEL and drilled lug holes combines the upgraded bracelet with the heritage case detail, a configuration that existed for only a brief production window and that long-time collectors treat as a distinct desirability point within the reference.


The same change happened at approximately the same time on the 16610LV (launched 2003, arriving without stamped end links). The no-date sibling, the 14060M, retained stamped end links for somewhat longer before transitioning one reason early 14060M examples are valued for their vintage specification.
The same end-link change happened at about the same time on the 16610LV (launched 2003, arriving without stamped end links). The no-date sibling, the 14060M, retained stamped end links somewhat longer before transitioning, one reason early 14060M examples are valued for their vintage specification.


<span id="phase-4-lug-holes-removed-and-lec-crystal-2003"></span>
<span id="phase-4-lug-holes-removed-and-lec-crystal-2003"></span>
=== Phase 4 — Lug holes removed and LEC crystal (~2003) ===
=== Phase 4 — Lug holes removed and LEC crystal (~2003) ===


'''Approximate serial range: F series (~2003–2004)'''
Serial range: F series (roughly 2003 to 2004).


Around 2003, Rolex plugged the lug holes on the 16610. From this point, the case is solid through the lug — no through-strap changes without tools. The Laser Etched Crown (LEC), a tiny Rolex coronet etched into the sapphire crystal at 6 o’clock (visible with loupe), was also introduced around 2003 as an anti-counterfeiting measure.
Around 2003 Rolex plugged the lug holes on the 16610. From this point the case is solid through the lug, so strap changes require tools. The Laser Etched Crown, a tiny Rolex coronet etched into the underside of the sapphire at 6 o'clock and visible with a loupe, was added at roughly the same time as an anti-counterfeiting measure.


The 16610LV arrived in autumn 2003 already without drilled lug holes, meaning no production 16610LV ever had lug holes. The standard 16610 lost them at approximately the same time. From approximately the F serial band onward, lugs are solid on both references.
The 16610LV launched in autumn 2003 already without drilled lug holes, so no production 16610LV ever carried them. The standard 16610 lost its lug holes at about the same point, and from the F serial band onward both references run with solid lugs.


<span id="phase-5-engraved-rehaut-and-final-spec-20052010"></span>
<span id="phase-5-engraved-rehaut-and-final-spec-20052010"></span>
=== Phase 5 — Engraved rehaut and final spec (~2005–2010) ===
=== Phase 5 — Engraved rehaut and final spec (~2005–2010) ===


'''Approximate serial range: D series (~2005–2006) through V series (production end ~2010)'''
Serial range: D series (roughly 2005 to 2006) through V series (production end around 2010).


Around 2005, the 16610 received the engraved inner rehaut repeating ROLEX ROLEX ROLEX text with the serial number at 6 o’clock. A further anti-counterfeiting measure that became standard across the Rolex sport line during this period. Late 16610 dials may also show slightly larger lume plots, approaching the Maxi dial format that became standard on the 116610LN successor.
Around 2005 the 16610 received the engraved inner rehaut, with repeating ROLEX ROLEX ROLEX text and the serial number at 6 o'clock. The engraving became standard across the Rolex sport line during this period as a further anti-counterfeiting step. Late 16610 dials may also show slightly larger lume plots, approaching the Maxi dial format that became standard on the 116610LN successor.


By the final years of production (2008–2010), the watch carried the current-spec bracelet (ref.93250 with SEL and Oysterlock clasp), engraved rehaut, LEC crystal, and Super-Luminova dial. The last production runs V, N, M series represent the fully evolved version of the platform. This is what the 116610LN replaced with a new case and ceramic bezel.
By the final years of production (2008–2010) the watch carried the current-spec bracelet (ref.93250 with SEL and Oysterlock clasp), engraved rehaut, LEC crystal, and Super-Luminova dial. The last production runs (V, N, M series) represent the fully evolved version of the platform, and that is what the 116610LN replaced with a new case and ceramic bezel.


'''Serial band authentication note''': the ranges above are collector approximations and not Rolex-confirmed production records. Rolex used production batches; individual watches near any transition point may not fit the expected specification. When authenticating a 16610, check the actual component — lug holes present or not, end link type, dial text, crystal marking — rather than relying on serial band alone. Serial band is a guide, not a guarantee.
The serial ranges above are collector approximations rather than Rolex-confirmed production records. Rolex produced in batches, and individual watches near a transition point may not match the expected specification. When authenticating a 16610, read the actual components — lug holes present or plugged, end-link type, dial text, crystal etching — rather than relying on the serial band as a guarantee.


<span id="movement-notes"></span>
<span id="movement-notes"></span>
== Movement notes ==
== Movement notes ==
[[File:Ref 16610 movement-3135.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Caliber 3135 movement|Caliber 3135 movement]]
[[File:Ref 16610 movement-3135-detail.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Caliber 3135 detail|Caliber 3135 detail]]


Caliber 3135 throughout the entire 23-year production run. No movement changeover occurred. The 3135 is a 28,800-vph automatic with quick-set date and Microstella regulation — one of Rolex’s most important modern calibers, shared with the Datejust and other professional references. COSC chronometer certification appears on the dial throughout the run.
Caliber 3135 ran unchanged through the entire 23-year production. It is a 28,800-vph automatic with quick-set date and Microstella regulation, shared with the Datejust and other professional Rolex references of the era. Power reserve is roughly 48 hours, and COSC certification appears on the dial from the start of the 16610 run.


Later 3135 specimens received the Parachrom blue hairspring, a paramagnetic alloy that resists magnetic fields and temperature variation better than the older Breguet overcoil spring. The exact transition point for Parachrom in the 16610 is not firmly pinned in this corpus.
Later 3135 specimens received the Parachrom blue hairspring, a paramagnetic alloy that resists magnetic fields and temperature variation better than the older Breguet overcoil spring. The exact transition point for Parachrom in the 16610 is not firmly established.


<span id="case-bezel-crystal-and-crown-notes"></span>
<span id="case-bezel-crystal-and-crown-notes"></span>
== Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes ==
== Case, bezel, crystal, and crown ==
[[File:Ref 16610 lume-shot.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Three lume technologies|Three lume technologies]]
[[File:Ref 16610 detail.jpg|thumb|right|250px|alt=Detail view|Detail view]]
[[File:Ref 16610 side-view.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Side profile|Side profile]]
 
The case is the 40mm crown-guard Oyster carried over from the 16800. Sapphire crystal with a Cyclops magnifier sits over the date window, and a black aluminum insert with a luminous pearl at 12 rides a serrated steel edge.


The case is the 40mm crown-guard Oyster carried over from the 16800. Sapphire crystal with a Cyclops magnifier over the date window. Black aluminum insert with luminous pearl at 12.
Four meaningful changes run across the production span. The drilled lug holes present from 1988 disappear around 2003. The Laser Etched Crown, etched on the underside of the sapphire at 6 o'clock, arrives at roughly the same moment. The engraved rehaut with repeating ROLEX text and the serial number appears around 2005. The bracelet evolves alongside, from stamped 501B end links on the 93150 to solid end links around 2001 and eventually the 93250 on an Oysterlock clasp.


Four meaningful changes occurred across the run: 1. '''Lug holes''': present ~1988–2003, removed ~2003 2. '''LEC crystal''': added ~2003 — tiny coronet etched at 6 o’clock position on crystal underside 3. '''Engraved rehaut''': added ~2005 — ROLEX ROLEX ROLEX with serial number 4. '''Bracelet system''': stamped 501B end links → SEL (~2001) → ref.93250 with Oysterlock
Rotation is unidirectional with 120 clicks, each click worth half a minute of elapsed time. The insert is black anodized aluminum on the standard 16610; the [[Reference:16610LV|16610LV]] uses a green anodized insert.


Bezel material (aluminum), crystal type (sapphire with Cyclops), and crown type (Triplock) remained consistent throughout. The 116610LN successor brought the Cerachrom ceramic bezel, Maxi case with wider lugs, and Glidelock bracelet — an entirely new platform built around the same identity.
Bezel material (aluminum), crystal type (sapphire with Cyclops), and crown type (Triplock) remained consistent across the 16610's life. The 116610LN successor arrived with a Cerachrom bezel, a Maxi case with wider lugs, and the Glidelock bracelet, a new platform under the same name.


<span id="bracelets-end-links-clasps-and-packaging-notes"></span>
<span id="bracelets-end-links-clasps-and-packaging-notes"></span>
== Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes ==
== Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes ==
[[File:Ref 16610 bracelet-clasp.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Oyster bracelet clasp|Oyster bracelet clasp]]
The 16610 bracelet runs through three configurations across the production span: ref.93150 with stamped 501B end links and Fliplock clasp from 1988, the SEL upgrade around 2001, and ref.93250 with Oysterlock clasp on later production. The exact serial cutover from ref.93150 to ref.93250 has not been firmly established.


The bracelet evolution is detailed in the timeline above (Phases 1, 3, and 5). The exact serial cutover from ref.93150 to ref.93250 is not pinned in this corpus.
A clasp code dates the clasp, not the watch head. The stamp is useful for establishing bracelet provenance but cannot date the head.


Clasp codes date the clasp, not the watch head. The clasp stamp is useful for establishing bracelet provenance but should not be used to date the head.
The early diver's extension uses a fold-out design; later production refined this to a link-based system integrated into the Oysterlock clasp. The transition from hollow end links (HEL) to solid end links (SEL) is among the most closely tracked collector milestones in the reference.


Packaging follows period-based logic. The 16610 spans several Rolex packaging generations from older green boxes through the later presentation packaging. Box, papers, and warranty card completeness is a significant factor for collector pricing.
Packaging follows period-based logic. The 16610 spans several Rolex packaging generations, from older green boxes through the later presentation packaging. Box, papers, and warranty card completeness is a significant factor for collector pricing.


<span id="special-branches"></span>
<span id="special-branches"></span>
== Special branches ==
== Special branches ==
[[File:Ref 16610 submariner-generations.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=Submariner generations comparison|Submariner generations comparison]]
[[File:Ref 16610 comex-hero.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=COMEX 16610 Submariner|COMEX 16610 Submariner]]
[[File:Ref 16610 comex-dial.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=COMEX dial with logo|COMEX dial with logo]]
[[File:Ref 16610 comex-dial-detail.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=COMEX dial detail|COMEX dial detail]]
[[File:Ref 16610 comex-caseback.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=COMEX caseback engraving|COMEX caseback engraving]]
[[File:Ref 16610 comex-marking.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=COMEX marking detail|COMEX marking detail]]


<span id="italian-state-police"></span>
<span id="italian-state-police"></span>
=== Italian State Police ===
=== Italian State Police ===


At least one documented 16610 carries the stamp of the Italian State Police Nautical Division. Institutional-issue Submariners from this era represent a collector branch analogous to the military MilSubs of the 5513/5517 era, though they are later, less rare, and less systematically documented.
A small run of 16610s was issued to the Squadra Nautica, the surface-vessel arm of the Polizia di Stato. Sotheby's Important Watches (June 2021, lot 207) catalogued one such example circa 2002, accompanied by Rolex Official Chronometer Certification dated 9 April 2003, leather cardholder, hang tags, and squadra nautica and polizia patches; the caseback is inscribed and the dial, case, and movement are all standard Rolex production. The 16610 issue is distinct from the better-known [[Reference:16600|16600]] Sea-Dweller "Polipetto," a 78-piece run made in 2008 for the Sommozzatori (the Polizia di Stato dive corps) to mark the unit's fiftieth anniversary; the Polipetto carries the divers' octopus emblem at nine o'clock and is engraved POLIZIA DI STATO SOMMOZZATORI 1958–2008 on the caseback. Phillips Geneva Watch Auction NINE (May 2019, lot 15, hammer CHF 137,500) is the canonical Polipetto reference. Documentation on the 16610 Squadra Nautica issue is thinner — single-lot rather than systematic — and the run reads as a late-modern parallel to earlier institutional commissions rather than a tightly numbered series.


<span id="comex"></span>
<span id="comex"></span>
=== COMEX ===
=== COMEX ===


COMEX-marked 16610 examples are known to exist. The COMEX (Compagnie Maritime d’Expertises) relationship with Rolex continued into this era. Rare, with strong premiums — but no specific COMEX 16610 lot is documented in this corpus.
Rolex produced COMEX-marked 16610 Submariners between approximately 1989 and 1997, with an additional small batch around 2003–2004. The Rolex-COMEX partnership itself ran earlier across the 5513 / 5514 / 1680 / 16800 generation; the 1989–1997 window is specifically the 16610 portion. The 16610 is the last Rolex model to carry the COMEX logo on its dial. With the exception of dial and caseback engravings, COMEX 16610s are otherwise identical to standard production: same caliber 3135, same case, same bracelet.
 
By the time of the 16610, diving technology had moved past the point where COMEX divers relied on mechanical wristwatches. The COMEX 16610s functioned as presentation and commemorative pieces rather than active diving tools, which means surviving examples tend to be in significantly better condition than older COMEX references ([[Reference:5513|5513]], [[Reference:5514|5514]], [[Reference:1680|1680]], [[Reference:16800|16800]]). They were never sold through stores, boutiques, or authorized dealers; they were issued directly to COMEX personnel.
 
The full lineage of COMEX-issued Rolex dive watches spans Submariner [[Reference:5513|5513]], [[Reference:5514|5514]], [[Reference:1680|1680]], [[Reference:16800|16800]], 168000, and 16610, plus Sea-Dweller 1665, 16660, and 16600. The 16610 sits at the end of this lineage; the Rolex-COMEX partnership ended before the next-generation Submariner was introduced.
 
COMEX 16610s are generally more affordable than older COMEX references ([[Reference:5514|5514]], [[Reference:1680|1680]]) but remain among the most collectible co-branded Rolex models. Watches with the COMEX logo on the dial command stronger premiums than those with caseback-only engravings.


<span id="lv-variant"></span>
<span id="lv-variant"></span>
<span id="gspr-french-presidential-security"></span>
=== GSPR — French presidential security ===
[[File:Ref 16610 government-gspr.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=16610 with GSPR caseback engraving and dial commission|16610 GSPR — caseback engraved with the GSPR logo and crown]]
A 2008-dated batch of thirty 16610s was made for the Groupe de sécurité de la présidence de la République, the gendarmerie unit responsible for protecting the French head of state from 1983 until the unit's 2007 reorganisation. Each watch is numbered N/30 on the caseback and engraved with the GSPR logo and crown rather than carrying the unit signature on the dial face. Antiquorum's Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces sale (December 2008, lot 471, ref. 16610, no. 11/30, case M910617) sold them with their fitted box, GSPR patch, badge, key ring, flag, and a frame of nine GSPR pins; recipients paid for the watches at issue. The branch reads as a late-modern parallel to earlier French institutional commissions and sits among the most strongly documented small-issue 16610 deliveries.
<span id="panama-canal-limited-edition"></span>
=== Panama Canal limited edition ===
[[File:Ref 16610 government-panama-canal.webp|thumb|right|220px|alt=16610 Panama Canal limited edition dial|16610 Panama Canal limited edition — black dial, gilt canal emblem above 6 o'clock]]
Seventy-five steel 16610s were made for the December 1999 transfer of canal sovereignty from the United States to the Republic of Panama, retailed exclusively by Mercurio Joyero in Panama City. The dial carries a gilt Panama Canal emblem above six o'clock with the inscription "Panama Canal — Canal de Panamá"; the caseback is engraved with the limited-edition number around its periphery. A parallel run of seventy-five two-tone steel and yellow-gold examples uses the same dial layout — those circulate as the [[Reference:16613|16613]] Panama Canal. Sotheby's Important Watches 2024 sold one of the steel examples; the steel run is the more frequently surfaced of the two configurations.
=== 16610LV variant ===
=== 16610LV variant ===


The 16610LV (“Kermit”) is a distinct reference, not a sub-variant. It uses the 16610 platform with a green aluminum bezel and Maxi dial. See the 16610LV article for coverage.
The 16610LV ("Kermit") is its own reference rather than a sub-variant of the 16610. It uses the 16610 platform with a green aluminum bezel and Maxi dial.
 
LV stands for Lunette Verte, French for green bezel. Within the [[Reference:16610LV|16610LV]] collectors track the Flat 4 versus Sharp 4 bezel numerals, a subtle difference in how the numeral 4 at the 40 position on the insert is rendered. The [[Reference:16610LV|16610LV]] also introduced the Maxi dial, with larger hour indices and broader hands, as a standard format, a layout that carried forward to the [[Reference:116610LN|116610LN]].


<span id="service-dial-warning-and-dial-text-authentication"></span>
<span id="authentication"></span>
== Service dial warning and dial-text authentication ==
== Authentication ==


The tritium-to-Luminova transition created a specific authentication shorthand: T SWISS T at 6 o’clock = tritium = pre-~1999 production. SWISS MADE = Luminova/Super-Luminova = post-~1999. These two dial texts are the fastest way to date a 16610.
The tritium-to-Luminova transition created a short authentication shorthand that doubles as the fastest way to date a 16610. T SWISS T or SWISS T<25 at 6 o'clock indicates a tritium dial from the 1988 to roughly 1998 era. A bare SWISS reading places the dial in the short Luminova transition of 1998 to 2000. SWISS MADE covers the settled Super-LumiNova era from 2000 to the end of production.


Rolex servicing in the 2000s routinely fitted Luminova dials to tritium-era watches, because tritium dials were no longer manufactured. A pre-A serial (pre-~1999) with a SWISS MADE dial has almost certainly had a service replacement. The Luminova dial is not wrong — Rolex fitted it but it is not the original configuration. Collectors treat this as a significant deduction.
Rolex servicing in the 2000s routinely fitted Luminova dials to tritium-era watches because tritium dials were no longer being manufactured. A pre-A serial (pre-1999) wearing a SWISS MADE dial has almost certainly had a service replacement. The Luminova dial is not incorrect, since Rolex fitted it, but it is no longer the original configuration, and collectors treat the swap as a significant deduction.


A tritium dial on a tritium-era serial commands a premium for the honest patina and the confidence that the watch has not been redailed. When buying a pre-Y serial 16610, check the dial text before anything else.
A tritium dial on a tritium-era serial carries a premium for the honest patina and the confidence that the watch has not been redialed. When buying a pre-Y serial 16610, read the dial text before anything else.


<span id="historical-market-and-auction-record"></span>
<span id="historical-market-and-auction-record"></span>
== Historical market and auction record ==
== Historical market and auction record ==


The 16610 is one of the most available pre-ceramic Submariners on the secondary market, which keeps prices lower than the rarer 16800 or the shorter-production 16610LV. A 23-year production run means high absolute production numbers, and the reference was never limited or specialty. A Rolex salesman reportedly stated on Rolex Forum that the 16610 was produced at a ratio of approximately 5–6 units for every one 16610LV — a figure that, if accurate, underscores both the volume of the standard reference and the relative scarcity of the Kermit.
The 16610 is one of the most available pre-ceramic Submariners on the secondary market, which keeps prices below the rarer 16800 and the shorter-production 16610LV. A 23-year production run means high absolute production numbers, and the reference was never limited or specialty. The 16610-to-16610LV production ratio is widely reported on collector forums at roughly five or six to one in favour of the standard reference, but no published source confirms that figure.
 
As the gap between aluminum-bezel and ceramic-bezel Submariners widens, attention within the 16610 has concentrated on tritium dials, the Swiss-only transitional dials, and early examples still carrying both lug holes and stamped end links.
 
== Auction record ==
 
Documented major-house lots covering the 16610 production span and its strongest special branches. Estimates given where hammer figures sit behind a sign-in wall.


As the gap between aluminum-bezel and ceramic-bezel Submariners widens, the 16610 is increasingly treated as a genuine collecting tier. The most tracked variants are tritium-dial examples, Swiss-only transitional dials, and early examples retaining both lug holes and stamped end links.
{| class="wikitable"
! Date !! House / sale !! Lot !! Configuration !! Result
|-
| 2019-05-21 || Sotheby's Class of 2019 (New York) || 15 || c.1994, black tritium dial, case W596821, movement 7262247 || est. USD 7,000–10,000
|-
| 2020-08-04 || Sotheby's Watches Weekly (New York) || 1056 (paired stainless 16610 lot) || c.1991, early tritium-era stainless, sibling to a 16613 in the same series || est. USD 8,000–12,000 (lot family)
|-
| 2020-09-15 || Sotheby's Watches (New York) || 304 || c.2002, black Luminova-era dial, case Y451547, movement 39175326, on stainless Oyster || est. USD 7,000–9,000
|-
| 2020-09-04 || Sotheby's Watches Weekly (New York) || 108 || c.2002, black Luminova dial, case Y841396, on Oyster with hang tag || est. USD 7,000–9,000
|-
| 2021-06-10 || Sotheby's Important Watches (New York) || 207 || c.2002, Italian State Police Squadra Nautica issue, case Y641302, with chronometer certification dated 9 April 2003, leather cardholder, squadra nautica and polizia patches, hang tags || est. USD 30,000–50,000
|-
| 2023-06-15 || Sotheby's Fine Watches (online) || 433 || c.1989, earliest tritium production, case L386867, movement 5259963, on stainless Oyster || est. USD 6,000–8,000
|-
| 2008-12 || Antiquorum Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces (Geneva) || 471 || c.2008, GSPR (French presidential security) issue no. 11/30, case M910617, with fitted box, GSPR patch, badge, key ring, flag, and a frame of nine GSPR pins || sold (institutional issue)
|}


== Sources ==
== Sources ==
* [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.sothebys.com/en/articles/how-to-start-collecting-the-rolex-submariner The Rolex Submariner: A Complete Collector's Guide] — Stephen Pulvirent, Sotheby's
* [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://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
* The Vintage Rolex Field Manual, Chevalier Edition — Morning Tundra, unknown
* ''The Vintage Rolex Field Manual'' — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
* [https://www.fratellowatches.com/rolex-submariner-14060m/ Rolex Submariner 14060M Review] — unknown, Fratello Watches
* [https://www.fratellowatches.com/rolex-submariner-14060m/ Rolex Submariner 14060M Review] (Fratello)
 
* [https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/the-rolex-submariner-that-bridges-the-gap-between-vintage-and-modern The Spec Sheet: The 16610 Submariner] — Hodinkee, 2022
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/rolex-blog/watch-review/comex-rolex-submariner-16610.html COMEX Rolex Submariner 16610] — Bob's Watches, 2021
* [https://www.swisswatchexpo.com/thewatchclub/2023/12/19/rolex-submariner-16610-buying-guide/ Rolex Submariner 16610 Buying Guide] — SwissWatchExpo, 2023
 
<span id="related-references"></span>
== Related references ==
 
The 16610 hosted the late-period [[Reference:comex|COMEX]] issue, the final reference in the COMEX program before Rolex ended institutional supply in 1997. The [[Reference:submariner|Submariner family hub]] tracks the wider line.


[[Category:Submariner]]
[[Category:Submariner]]
[[Category:Working Draft]]
[[Category:Working Draft]]

Latest revision as of 04:21, 30 April 2026


Submariner -> 16610

The 16610 is the standard Submariner of its era, the reference most people picture when they say "Submariner." It entered production around 1988, replacing the 16800, and ran until 2010 when the ceramic-bezel 116610LN took over. That is roughly 23 years on a single reference number. No other Submariner Date reference comes close: the 16800 lasted about eight years, the 116610LN ten. The 16610 ran for more than two decades while the rest of the Rolex sports line moved around it, accumulating small specification changes that reward careful inspection.

Across that span the 16610 worked through three lume technologies, two bracelet systems, and a sequence of anti-counterfeiting measures, all without a new reference number. Caliber 3135 stayed put.

Rolex Submariner Ref. 16610
Rolex Submariner Ref. 16610

Core facts

detail value
reference 16610
family Submariner Date
production approximately 1988 to 2010 (~23 years)
movement caliber 3135, COSC, 28,800 vph — unchanged for the entire run
case 40mm, 904L steel, Oyster, drilled lug holes (removed ~2003)
crystal sapphire with Cyclops; Laser Etched Crown (LEC) from 2003
water resistance 300m / 1000ft
crown Triplock screw-down
bezel unidirectional 60-click, black aluminum insert
bezel clicks 120-click unidirectional (each click = half a minute)
bracelet (early) Oyster ref.93150, 501B stamped end links, stamped Fliplock clasp
bracelet (~2001) SEL (Super End Links) replace stamped 501B end links
bracelet (later) Oyster ref.93250, Oysterlock clasp
lume tritium (to ~1998), Luminova (~1998–2000), Super-Luminova (~2000+)
rehaut plain (early), engraved ~2005
predecessor 16800
variants 16610LV (Kermit, 2003–2010)
successor 116610LN

Where it sits in the line

The 16610 follows the transitional 16800 and precedes the 116610LN. The 16800 had introduced sapphire crystal and the 300m rating to the date Submariner; the 16610 settled the platform around caliber 3135, the definitive Triplock crown, the 40mm Oyster case, and the graduated 60-click aluminum bezel insert, and held that specification for over two decades. The broader public associates the Submariner Date with the 16610 because it ran for so long, in such volume, and looked so consistent.

It ran alongside the no-date 14060 and 14060M. Together those references make up the five-digit Submariner era. Same case, same bracelet architecture, many of the same specification milestones; the 16610 carries the date, the 14060 / 14060M does not.

The 16610 also spawned the 16610LV anniversary variant, the "Kermit," in 2003. The Kermit uses an identical case and movement, differing only in its green aluminum bezel insert and Maxi dial.

Production outline

The 16610's long production splits into five loosely-bounded phases. Transition points are approximate and do not align with calendar decades.

Phase 1 — Early production: tritium dials, drilled lugs, stamped end links (~1988–late 1990s)

Serial range: pre-X through X series.

The earliest 16610 examples sit closest in character to the preceding 16800. Dials carry tritium lume marked T SWISS T or T<25 near 6 o'clock; tritium has a 12.3-year half-life, so on a 20- to 30-year-old dial the lume runs from light patination to the deep cream, tan, and orange tones collectors call tropical. Lug holes drill straight through the case, allowing strap changes without tools. The bracelet is ref.93150 with stamped hollow 501B end links and a stamped Fliplock clasp with wetsuit extension. The rehaut stays smooth and unengraved throughout the phase.

This is the 16610 at its most vintage-adjacent. The early watch reads as an update of the specification that started with the 5513 rather than a departure from it.

Phase 2 — Luminova transition (~1998–2001)

Serial range: A to P series (roughly 1998 to 2000).

A short window sits between the full tritium era and the settled Luminova era. Dials marked SWISS only, without the T prefix, appear during the lume changeover. Collectors call these Swiss-only dials, and they are a minor but tracked transitional variant.

Around 1998–1999 Rolex switched to Luminova on the 16610. Late dials drop the tritium markings entirely and read SWISS MADE at 6 o'clock. Luminova glows green-white rather than the warm orange-yellow of aged tritium and does not patinate the same way, which gives the late watch a different visual character on the wrist.

The transition was not instantaneous. Some P-series 16610s still carry tritium and some A-series already wear Luminova. The 93150 bracelet with stamped end links remained in place through this period, keeping the overall feel of the early generation despite the lume change.

Phase 3 — SEL upgrade (~2001)

Serial range: Y series (roughly 2001 to 2002).

Around 2001 Rolex replaced the stamped 501B end links with solid Super End Links (SEL, code 93250). The change is tactile as much as visual: the SEL bracelet is heavier, more rigid, and fills the lug gap more completely than the older stamped end links. Luminova was upgraded to Super-Luminova at about the same time, improving brightness and longevity.

A 16610 with Y serial or later should carry SEL. A pre-Y serial fitted with SEL has probably had a bracelet upgrade. A Y-plus serial with 501B is unusual and worth verifying against the physical parts.

Y-serial examples (about 2001–2002) are prized for the overlap they capture: SEL had arrived but the drilled lug holes had not yet been removed. A Y-serial 16610 with both SEL and drilled lug holes combines the upgraded bracelet with the heritage case detail, a configuration that existed for only a brief production window and that long-time collectors treat as a distinct desirability point within the reference.

The same end-link change happened at about the same time on the 16610LV (launched 2003, arriving without stamped end links). The no-date sibling, the 14060M, retained stamped end links somewhat longer before transitioning, one reason early 14060M examples are valued for their vintage specification.

Phase 4 — Lug holes removed and LEC crystal (~2003)

Serial range: F series (roughly 2003 to 2004).

Around 2003 Rolex plugged the lug holes on the 16610. From this point the case is solid through the lug, so strap changes require tools. The Laser Etched Crown, a tiny Rolex coronet etched into the underside of the sapphire at 6 o'clock and visible with a loupe, was added at roughly the same time as an anti-counterfeiting measure.

The 16610LV launched in autumn 2003 already without drilled lug holes, so no production 16610LV ever carried them. The standard 16610 lost its lug holes at about the same point, and from the F serial band onward both references run with solid lugs.

Phase 5 — Engraved rehaut and final spec (~2005–2010)

Serial range: D series (roughly 2005 to 2006) through V series (production end around 2010).

Around 2005 the 16610 received the engraved inner rehaut, with repeating ROLEX ROLEX ROLEX text and the serial number at 6 o'clock. The engraving became standard across the Rolex sport line during this period as a further anti-counterfeiting step. Late 16610 dials may also show slightly larger lume plots, approaching the Maxi dial format that became standard on the 116610LN successor.

By the final years of production (2008–2010) the watch carried the current-spec bracelet (ref.93250 with SEL and Oysterlock clasp), engraved rehaut, LEC crystal, and Super-Luminova dial. The last production runs (V, N, M series) represent the fully evolved version of the platform, and that is what the 116610LN replaced with a new case and ceramic bezel.

The serial ranges above are collector approximations rather than Rolex-confirmed production records. Rolex produced in batches, and individual watches near a transition point may not match the expected specification. When authenticating a 16610, read the actual components — lug holes present or plugged, end-link type, dial text, crystal etching — rather than relying on the serial band as a guarantee.

Movement notes

Caliber 3135 movement
Caliber 3135 movement
Caliber 3135 detail
Caliber 3135 detail

Caliber 3135 ran unchanged through the entire 23-year production. It is a 28,800-vph automatic with quick-set date and Microstella regulation, shared with the Datejust and other professional Rolex references of the era. Power reserve is roughly 48 hours, and COSC certification appears on the dial from the start of the 16610 run.

Later 3135 specimens received the Parachrom blue hairspring, a paramagnetic alloy that resists magnetic fields and temperature variation better than the older Breguet overcoil spring. The exact transition point for Parachrom in the 16610 is not firmly established.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

Three lume technologies
Three lume technologies
Detail view
Detail view
Side profile
Side profile

The case is the 40mm crown-guard Oyster carried over from the 16800. Sapphire crystal with a Cyclops magnifier sits over the date window, and a black aluminum insert with a luminous pearl at 12 rides a serrated steel edge.

Four meaningful changes run across the production span. The drilled lug holes present from 1988 disappear around 2003. The Laser Etched Crown, etched on the underside of the sapphire at 6 o'clock, arrives at roughly the same moment. The engraved rehaut with repeating ROLEX text and the serial number appears around 2005. The bracelet evolves alongside, from stamped 501B end links on the 93150 to solid end links around 2001 and eventually the 93250 on an Oysterlock clasp.

Rotation is unidirectional with 120 clicks, each click worth half a minute of elapsed time. The insert is black anodized aluminum on the standard 16610; the 16610LV uses a green anodized insert.

Bezel material (aluminum), crystal type (sapphire with Cyclops), and crown type (Triplock) remained consistent across the 16610's life. The 116610LN successor arrived with a Cerachrom bezel, a Maxi case with wider lugs, and the Glidelock bracelet, a new platform under the same name.

Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes

Oyster bracelet clasp
Oyster bracelet clasp

The 16610 bracelet runs through three configurations across the production span: ref.93150 with stamped 501B end links and Fliplock clasp from 1988, the SEL upgrade around 2001, and ref.93250 with Oysterlock clasp on later production. The exact serial cutover from ref.93150 to ref.93250 has not been firmly established.

A clasp code dates the clasp, not the watch head. The stamp is useful for establishing bracelet provenance but cannot date the head.

The early diver's extension uses a fold-out design; later production refined this to a link-based system integrated into the Oysterlock clasp. The transition from hollow end links (HEL) to solid end links (SEL) is among the most closely tracked collector milestones in the reference.

Packaging follows period-based logic. The 16610 spans several Rolex packaging generations, from older green boxes through the later presentation packaging. Box, papers, and warranty card completeness is a significant factor for collector pricing.

Special branches

Submariner generations comparison
Submariner generations comparison
COMEX 16610 Submariner
COMEX 16610 Submariner
COMEX dial with logo
COMEX dial with logo
COMEX dial detail
COMEX dial detail
COMEX caseback engraving
COMEX caseback engraving
COMEX marking detail
COMEX marking detail

Italian State Police

A small run of 16610s was issued to the Squadra Nautica, the surface-vessel arm of the Polizia di Stato. Sotheby's Important Watches (June 2021, lot 207) catalogued one such example circa 2002, accompanied by Rolex Official Chronometer Certification dated 9 April 2003, leather cardholder, hang tags, and squadra nautica and polizia patches; the caseback is inscribed and the dial, case, and movement are all standard Rolex production. The 16610 issue is distinct from the better-known 16600 Sea-Dweller "Polipetto," a 78-piece run made in 2008 for the Sommozzatori (the Polizia di Stato dive corps) to mark the unit's fiftieth anniversary; the Polipetto carries the divers' octopus emblem at nine o'clock and is engraved POLIZIA DI STATO SOMMOZZATORI 1958–2008 on the caseback. Phillips Geneva Watch Auction NINE (May 2019, lot 15, hammer CHF 137,500) is the canonical Polipetto reference. Documentation on the 16610 Squadra Nautica issue is thinner — single-lot rather than systematic — and the run reads as a late-modern parallel to earlier institutional commissions rather than a tightly numbered series.

COMEX

Rolex produced COMEX-marked 16610 Submariners between approximately 1989 and 1997, with an additional small batch around 2003–2004. The Rolex-COMEX partnership itself ran earlier across the 5513 / 5514 / 1680 / 16800 generation; the 1989–1997 window is specifically the 16610 portion. The 16610 is the last Rolex model to carry the COMEX logo on its dial. With the exception of dial and caseback engravings, COMEX 16610s are otherwise identical to standard production: same caliber 3135, same case, same bracelet.

By the time of the 16610, diving technology had moved past the point where COMEX divers relied on mechanical wristwatches. The COMEX 16610s functioned as presentation and commemorative pieces rather than active diving tools, which means surviving examples tend to be in significantly better condition than older COMEX references (5513, 5514, 1680, 16800). They were never sold through stores, boutiques, or authorized dealers; they were issued directly to COMEX personnel.

The full lineage of COMEX-issued Rolex dive watches spans Submariner 5513, 5514, 1680, 16800, 168000, and 16610, plus Sea-Dweller 1665, 16660, and 16600. The 16610 sits at the end of this lineage; the Rolex-COMEX partnership ended before the next-generation Submariner was introduced.

COMEX 16610s are generally more affordable than older COMEX references (5514, 1680) but remain among the most collectible co-branded Rolex models. Watches with the COMEX logo on the dial command stronger premiums than those with caseback-only engravings.

GSPR — French presidential security

16610 with GSPR caseback engraving and dial commission
16610 GSPR — caseback engraved with the GSPR logo and crown

A 2008-dated batch of thirty 16610s was made for the Groupe de sécurité de la présidence de la République, the gendarmerie unit responsible for protecting the French head of state from 1983 until the unit's 2007 reorganisation. Each watch is numbered N/30 on the caseback and engraved with the GSPR logo and crown rather than carrying the unit signature on the dial face. Antiquorum's Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces sale (December 2008, lot 471, ref. 16610, no. 11/30, case M910617) sold them with their fitted box, GSPR patch, badge, key ring, flag, and a frame of nine GSPR pins; recipients paid for the watches at issue. The branch reads as a late-modern parallel to earlier French institutional commissions and sits among the most strongly documented small-issue 16610 deliveries.

Panama Canal limited edition

16610 Panama Canal limited edition dial
16610 Panama Canal limited edition — black dial, gilt canal emblem above 6 o'clock

Seventy-five steel 16610s were made for the December 1999 transfer of canal sovereignty from the United States to the Republic of Panama, retailed exclusively by Mercurio Joyero in Panama City. The dial carries a gilt Panama Canal emblem above six o'clock with the inscription "Panama Canal — Canal de Panamá"; the caseback is engraved with the limited-edition number around its periphery. A parallel run of seventy-five two-tone steel and yellow-gold examples uses the same dial layout — those circulate as the 16613 Panama Canal. Sotheby's Important Watches 2024 sold one of the steel examples; the steel run is the more frequently surfaced of the two configurations.

16610LV variant

The 16610LV ("Kermit") is its own reference rather than a sub-variant of the 16610. It uses the 16610 platform with a green aluminum bezel and Maxi dial.

LV stands for Lunette Verte, French for green bezel. Within the 16610LV collectors track the Flat 4 versus Sharp 4 bezel numerals, a subtle difference in how the numeral 4 at the 40 position on the insert is rendered. The 16610LV also introduced the Maxi dial, with larger hour indices and broader hands, as a standard format, a layout that carried forward to the 116610LN.

Authentication

The tritium-to-Luminova transition created a short authentication shorthand that doubles as the fastest way to date a 16610. T SWISS T or SWISS T<25 at 6 o'clock indicates a tritium dial from the 1988 to roughly 1998 era. A bare SWISS reading places the dial in the short Luminova transition of 1998 to 2000. SWISS MADE covers the settled Super-LumiNova era from 2000 to the end of production.

Rolex servicing in the 2000s routinely fitted Luminova dials to tritium-era watches because tritium dials were no longer being manufactured. A pre-A serial (pre-1999) wearing a SWISS MADE dial has almost certainly had a service replacement. The Luminova dial is not incorrect, since Rolex fitted it, but it is no longer the original configuration, and collectors treat the swap as a significant deduction.

A tritium dial on a tritium-era serial carries a premium for the honest patina and the confidence that the watch has not been redialed. When buying a pre-Y serial 16610, read the dial text before anything else.

Historical market and auction record

The 16610 is one of the most available pre-ceramic Submariners on the secondary market, which keeps prices below the rarer 16800 and the shorter-production 16610LV. A 23-year production run means high absolute production numbers, and the reference was never limited or specialty. The 16610-to-16610LV production ratio is widely reported on collector forums at roughly five or six to one in favour of the standard reference, but no published source confirms that figure.

As the gap between aluminum-bezel and ceramic-bezel Submariners widens, attention within the 16610 has concentrated on tritium dials, the Swiss-only transitional dials, and early examples still carrying both lug holes and stamped end links.

Auction record

Documented major-house lots covering the 16610 production span and its strongest special branches. Estimates given where hammer figures sit behind a sign-in wall.

Date House / sale Lot Configuration Result
2019-05-21 Sotheby's Class of 2019 (New York) 15 c.1994, black tritium dial, case W596821, movement 7262247 est. USD 7,000–10,000
2020-08-04 Sotheby's Watches Weekly (New York) 1056 (paired stainless 16610 lot) c.1991, early tritium-era stainless, sibling to a 16613 in the same series est. USD 8,000–12,000 (lot family)
2020-09-15 Sotheby's Watches (New York) 304 c.2002, black Luminova-era dial, case Y451547, movement 39175326, on stainless Oyster est. USD 7,000–9,000
2020-09-04 Sotheby's Watches Weekly (New York) 108 c.2002, black Luminova dial, case Y841396, on Oyster with hang tag est. USD 7,000–9,000
2021-06-10 Sotheby's Important Watches (New York) 207 c.2002, Italian State Police Squadra Nautica issue, case Y641302, with chronometer certification dated 9 April 2003, leather cardholder, squadra nautica and polizia patches, hang tags est. USD 30,000–50,000
2023-06-15 Sotheby's Fine Watches (online) 433 c.1989, earliest tritium production, case L386867, movement 5259963, on stainless Oyster est. USD 6,000–8,000
2008-12 Antiquorum Important Modern & Vintage Timepieces (Geneva) 471 c.2008, GSPR (French presidential security) issue no. 11/30, case M910617, with fitted box, GSPR patch, badge, key ring, flag, and a frame of nine GSPR pins sold (institutional issue)

Sources

Related references

The 16610 hosted the late-period COMEX issue, the final reference in the COMEX program before Rolex ended institutional supply in 1997. The Submariner family hub tracks the wider line.