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{{#seo:
{{#seo:
|title=Rolex Submariner Date 116618 — BezelBase
|title=Rolex 116618 Submariner — Production, Dial Variants, Serial Ranges | BezelBase
|description=The full gold Submariner is not a new idea. Rolex introduced the first yellow gold Submariner Date — the 1680/8 — in 1969, the same year as the Apollo 11…
|description=The full gold Submariner is not a new idea. Rolex introduced the first yellow gold Submariner Date — the 1680/8 — in 1969, the same year as the Apollo 11…
|keywords=Rolex, 116618, Submariner, specifications, reference guide
|keywords=Rolex, 116618, Submariner, specifications, reference guide
|image=Ref 116618 detail 2.jpg
|image_alt=Yellow-gold Submariner, Cerachrom
|type=article
|type=article
|og_type=article
|published_time=2026-04-14T16:13:04Z
|modified_time=2026-04-29T02:46:12Z
|robots=index,follow,max-image-preview:large
}}
}}


<small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] -> '''116618'''</small>


<small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] → '''116618'''</small>
The 116618 is the full 18k yellow-gold Submariner Date of the Cerachrom era, in production from roughly 2008 to 2020 on caliber 3135. Rolex has offered a full yellow-gold Submariner Date in every generation since the 1680/8 arrived in 1969, and the 116618 is the fifth chapter of that line — the first one to pair the full-gold case with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel.


[[File:Ref 116618 detail 2.jpg|thumb|right|300px]]
Within its own generation it is the overt statement. The steel 116610LN is the workhorse; the white-gold 116619LB is a stealth play that reads as steel on the wrist; the 116618 reads unambiguously as gold, in every light.


The full gold Submariner is not a new idea. Rolex introduced the first yellow gold Submariner Date — the 1680/8 — in 1969, the same year as the Apollo 11 moon landing. By the time the 116618 arrived around 2008–2009, the gold Submariner had been in continuous production for nearly four decades across four preceding references. The 116618 is the fifth generation of that lineage, and the first to pair a full gold case with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel.
<span id="core-facts"></span>


Where the steel 116610LN is the workhorse and the white gold 116619LB is the stealth play, the 116618 is the overt statement piece — a full gold dive watch that performs in light.
[[File:Ref 116618 detail 2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|alt=Yellow-gold Submariner, Cerachrom|Yellow-gold Submariner, Cerachrom]]


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


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|-
|-
| production
| production
| approximately 2008 to 2020
| about 2008 to 2020
|-
|-
| movement
| movement
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== Gold Submariner lineage ==
== Gold Submariner lineage ==


The 116618 is a chapter in a continuous story. Rolex has offered a full yellow gold Submariner Date through every major reference generation since 1969.
Rolex has offered a full yellow-gold Submariner Date across every major generation since 1969.


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
Line 98: Line 104:
== Where it sits in the generation ==
== Where it sits in the generation ==


The 116618 is the full-gold member of the ceramic-era Submariner generation:
The 116618 is the full-gold member of the ceramic-era Submariner generation, sitting alongside the steel 116610, the Rolesor [[Reference:116613|116613]], and the full white-gold [[Reference:116619LB|116619LB]]. The two precious-metal models — 116618 and 116619LB launched together around 2008 as the first Submariners with Cerachrom ceramic bezels. The steel 116610LN and two-tone 116613 followed in 2009–2010. In practice, the gold references were the initial rollout vehicle for ceramic in the Submariner family.
 
* 116610: steel
* [[Reference:116613|116613]]: Rolesor (two-tone)
* [[Reference:116618|116618]]: full 18k yellow gold
* [[Reference:116619LB|116619LB]]: full 18k white gold
 
The 116618 and 116619LB launched together around 2008 as the first Submariners with Cerachrom ceramic bezels — the precious-metal models were the beta testers for ceramic in the Submariner family. The steel 116610LN and two-tone 116613 followed in 2009–2010.


<span id="what-changed-from-the-16618"></span>
<span id="what-changed-from-the-16618"></span>
== What changed from the 16618 ==
== What changed from the 16618 ==


The same generational package that the 116610LN brought to steel arrived for the gold Submariner: Cerachrom ceramic bezel in place of aluminum, Glidelock clasp replacing Fliplock, Maxi Case with broader lugs, Chromalight lume replacing SuperLuminova, and engraved rehaut.
The same generational package that the 116610LN brought to steel arrived on the gold Submariner: Cerachrom ceramic in place of aluminum, Glidelock clasp in place of Fliplock, the Maxi Case with broader lugs, Chromalight lume in place of SuperLuminova, and an engraved rehaut. The 16618's aluminum bezel had been subject to fading under UV exposure. Cerachrom eliminates that pathway see the bezel section below for detail.
 
The aluminum bezel on the 16618 was subject to fading from UV exposure. Cerachrom solved that — details in the bezel section below.


<span id="production-outline"></span>
<span id="production-outline"></span>
== Production outline ==
== Production outline ==


The 116618 ran for roughly twelve years. Both LB (blue) and LN (black) variants were available throughout. No major mid-run changes are documented beyond the standard ceramic-era specification.
The 116618 ran for roughly twelve years with both LB (blue) and LN (black) variants available throughout, and no major mid-run changes documented beyond the standard ceramic-era specification.


Case, bezel body, crown, crown guards, bracelet, and case back are all 18k yellow gold. This makes the 116618 one of the heaviest Submariner references in any generation. Forum owners report a weight of approximately 227.5g fully linked, and the density of gold gives the watch a heft that is immediately apparent compared to the steel 116610LN or even the two-tone 116613.
Case, bezel body, crown, crown guards, bracelet, and case back are all 18k yellow gold, which makes the 116618 one of the heaviest Submariner references in any generation. Rolex Forum owners report a total weight near 227.5g fully linked, and the density is obvious on the wrist compared to a steel 116610LN or even a Rolesor 116613.


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


Caliber 3135 throughout — the same movement used in the 116610, 116613, and 116619LB. Quick-set date, 28800 bph, Microstella regulation, Parachrom hairspring.
Caliber 3135 throughout — the same movement that powers the 116610, the 116613, and the 116619LB. Quick-set date, 28,800 vph, Microstella regulation, and a Parachrom blue hairspring. The Parachrom spring is Rolex's paramagnetic niobium-zirconium alloy, more resistant to magnetic interference than older hairspring alloys, and a meaningful attribute for a watch worn around electromagnetic fields. The 3135 is case-material-agnostic — the same movement goes into steel, two-tone, yellow-gold, and white-gold Submariners — so the 116618's premium over the 116610LN runs entirely on materials and finishing rather than on mechanical difference.


The Parachrom hairspring is made from a paramagnetic niobium-zirconium alloy that resists magnetic interference — a meaningful attribute for a watch worn in environments near electromagnetic fields. The 3135 is case-material-agnostic: the same movement goes into steel, two-tone, yellow gold, and white gold Submariners. The 116618’s premium over the 116610LN is entirely about materials and finishing, not mechanics.
The successor 126618 moved to caliber 3235, which brought a 70-hour power reserve, the Chronergy escapement, and updated regulation. That is the functional gap between the 116618 and the current gold Submariner.
 
The successor 126618 moved to caliber 3235, which added 70-hour power reserve, the Chronergy escapement, and updated regulation. That is the functional gap between the 116618 and the current reference.


<span id="dial-map"></span>
<span id="dial-map"></span>
Line 136: Line 131:
=== Blue dial (LB) ===
=== Blue dial (LB) ===


Like the two-tone 116613LB, the blue-dial 116618LB underwent a dial finish transition during production. Earlier examples carried a flatter blue finish, while later production shifted to the more pronounced sunburst blue that became the standard across the gold Submariner line. The exact timing of this transition on the 116618LB is not as well documented as on the 116613LB.
Like the two-tone 116613LB, the blue-dial 116618LB went through a dial-finish transition during production. Earlier examples carried a flatter blue; later production moved to the more pronounced sunburst blue that became the standard across the gold Submariner line. The exact timing on the 116618LB is less well-documented than on the two-tone reference.
 
The sunburst blue dial is the 116618’s signature configuration. In shadow it reads deep midnight blue; in full direct sunlight it reaches pale sky blue. The gold applied maxi markers and hands amplify this optical range — more reflective surface area than on steel-cased models means more interaction with changing light.


Paired with the blue Cerachrom bezel and the yellow gold case, the dial creates a warm-gold-framing-cool-blue palette that no other Submariner replicates. The Rolesor 116613LB comes close but steel outer links and case back dilute the gold presence. On the 116618, there is no steel anywhere.
The sunburst blue is the 116618's signature configuration. In shadow it reads deep midnight blue; in full direct sunlight it reaches pale sky blue. The gold Maxi markers and hands amplify that optical range — more reflective surface area than a steel-cased model carries, so more interaction with changing light. Paired with the blue Cerachrom and the yellow-gold case, the dial produces a warm-gold-framing-cool-blue palette that no other Submariner configuration replicates. The Rolesor 116613LB comes close, but the steel outer links and case back dilute the gold presence. On the 116618 there is no steel anywhere.


<span id="black-dial-ln"></span>
<span id="black-dial-ln"></span>
=== Black dial (LN) ===
=== Black dial (LN) ===


Black dial with gold maxi markers. Black on a full gold case creates a more formal, tuxedo-like appearance compared to the blue’s sporty warmth.
Black dial with gold Maxi markers. Black against a full gold case reads more formal than the blue, closer to a tuxedo than to a sport watch.


<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 ==


<span id="case"></span>
<span id="case"></span>
=== Case ===
=== Case ===


The entire case is 18k yellow gold: case body, bezel, crown, crown tube, crown guards, and case back. Super Case with broader lugs than the earlier 16618. Crown guards are present. Triplock crown seals to 300m.
The entire case is 18k yellow gold: body, bezel, crown, crown tube, crown guards, and case back. Super Case construction — wider lugs and more substantial crown guards than the 16618. Triplock crown, sealed to 300m.


A 40mm case with a 20mm bracelet. The successor 126618 moved to 41mm with thinner, more tapered lugs and a wider 21mm bracelet — the Fratello review noted the new lugs are pointier, closer to the original 1680/8 lineage, stepping back from the blocky Maxi Case aesthetic. The 116618’s broader-lug Super Case profile is therefore the maximum expression of that Maxi Case era.
A 40mm case on a 20mm bracelet. The successor 126618 moved to 41mm with thinner, more tapered lugs and a 21mm bracelet; Fratello's 126618LB review noted the new lugs are pointier, closer to the original 1680/8 lineage, and a step back from the blocky Maxi Case aesthetic. That makes the 116618's broader-lug Super Case the maximum expression of that Maxi-era geometry.


<span id="bezel"></span>
<span id="bezel"></span>
=== Bezel ===
=== Bezel ===


Cerachrom ceramic — the generation-defining upgrade. No fading, no scratching like the aluminum inserts of the 16618. Numerals and graduation marks are filled with gold (not platinum, as on the steel and white gold models), matching the yellow gold aesthetic. This gold-filled numeral detail is unique to the 116618 within its generation.
Cerachrom ceramic — the generation-defining upgrade. No fading, no scratching in the way the aluminum inserts on the 16618 faded and scratched. Numerals and graduation marks on the 116618 are filled with gold rather than the platinum used on the steel and white-gold models, matching the yellow-gold aesthetic of the case. The gold-filled numerals are unique to the 116618 within its own generation.


<span id="crystal"></span>
<span id="crystal"></span>
=== Crystal ===
=== Crystal ===


Sapphire with Cyclops over the date window. The inner rehaut is engraved with repeating ROLEX ROLEX text and serial number at 6 o’clock.
Sapphire with Cyclops over the date window. The inner rehaut is engraved with repeating ROLEX ROLEX text and the serial number at 6 o'clock.


<span id="hallmarks"></span>
<span id="hallmarks"></span>
=== Hallmarks ===
=== Hallmarks ===


Hallmarks for 18k yellow gold follow the standard Swiss precious metal system. The 750 stamp (indicating 18k / 750 parts per thousand fine gold) should appear on case and case back. The St. Bernard dog “Barry” mark is used for Swiss precious metals post-1995.
Hallmarks follow the standard Swiss precious-metal system. The 750 stamp indicating 18k, 750 parts per thousand fine gold should appear on the case and case back. The St. Bernard "Barry" mark is the Swiss precious-metals stamp used post-1995.


<span id="bracelets-end-links-clasps-and-packaging-notes"></span>
<span id="bracelets-end-links-clasps-and-packaging-notes"></span>
Line 178: Line 171:
=== Bracelet ===
=== Bracelet ===


The 93258 is a full 18k yellow gold Oyster with Glidelock extension clasp allowing approximately 20mm of micro-adjustment. Polished center links catch and reflect light against the brushed outer links, creating a play of finishes along the wrist the Field Manual cites this “visual pop” as distinct to the gold Submariner bracelets, since the steel 116610LN’s Oyster is entirely brushed.
The 93258 is a full 18k yellow-gold Oyster with Glidelock extension, offering roughly 20mm of micro-adjustment. The polished center links catch and reflect light against the brushed outer links, creating a play of finishes down the wrist; the Vintage Rolex Field Manual cites this as a distinctive quality of the gold Submariner bracelets, absent on the steel 116610LN where the Oyster is entirely brushed.


Full gold construction makes this one of the heaviest bracelets in the Submariner catalog. The bracelet does not change during the run; all 116618 examples carry the same Glidelock-equipped 93258.
Full-gold construction makes this one of the heaviest bracelets in the Submariner catalog. The bracelet does not change during the run; every 116618 carries the same Glidelock-equipped 93258.


<span id="production-volume-estimates"></span>
<span id="production-volume-estimates"></span>
== Production volume estimates ==
== Production volume estimates ==


Industry estimates from the ~2010 era suggest Rolex produced approximately 8,000 gold Submariners per year across all gold references (116618 and 116619LB). If those figures held roughly steady, the 116618’s share over its twelve-year run would be a modest total — though Rolex does not publish production numbers and these figures are approximations circulated among dealers and collectors.
Industry estimates from the early 2010s put gold Submariner production at roughly 8,000 units per year across both gold references (116618 and 116619LB combined). If those figures held steady across the 116618's twelve-year run, its share would add up to a modest total — but Rolex does not publish production figures, and the number circulates among dealers and collectors rather than from any factory source.


<span id="market-and-collector-context"></span>
<span id="market-and-collector-context"></span>
== Market and collector context ==
== Market and collector context ==


The 116618 trades in a different segment than the steel Submariners. Buyers choosing a 116618 are not comparing it to a 116610LN — the price gap is too wide for that to be a real decision. The 116618 competes with other precious-metal sport watches and with its white gold sibling, the 116619LB.
The 116618 trades in a different segment than the steel Submariners. Buyers choosing a 116618 are not comparing it to a 116610LN — the price gap is too wide for that to be a real cross-shop. The real competition is other precious-metal sport watches and the white-gold sibling, the 116619LB.


The successor 126618LB retails at $48,600 USD. The 116618 trades on the secondary market at a meaningful discount, reflecting the 40mm case, caliber 3135, and the lack of current warranty. The blue LB is more commonly traded; the black LN is less frequently encountered and sometimes trades at a modest discount.
The successor 126618LB retails at $48,600 USD. The 116618 trades on the secondary market at a meaningful discount to that figure, reflecting the 40mm case, the older caliber 3135, and the lack of current warranty. The blue LB is the more commonly traded dial; the black LN is less frequently encountered and sometimes trades at a modest discount.


No specific lot-level auction data has been captured for the 116618. Recent enough that dealer market pricing is more relevant than auction hammer prices for most examples. The gold Submariner’s auction prominence belongs to the 1680/8 and early references; the 116618 circulates primarily in the dealer market.
No specific lot-level auction data has surfaced for the 116618 yet. The reference is recent enough that dealer market pricing is the more relevant signal for most examples; the gold Submariner's auction prominence belongs to the 1680/8 and the earlier references, while the 116618 circulates primarily through the dealer market.


== Sources ==
== Sources ==
* [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
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/rolex-blog/rolex-info/rolex-two-tone-submariner.html Bob's Watches two-tone Submariner history] — unknown, Bob's Watches
* [https://www.bobswatches.com/rolex-blog/rolex-info/rolex-two-tone-submariner.html Bob's Watches two-tone Submariner history] — Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
* [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://www.grayandsons.com/blog/rolex-submariner-date-history/ Gray & Sons Submariner Date history] — unknown, Gray & Sons
* [https://www.grayandsons.com/blog/rolex-submariner-date-history/ Gray & Sons Submariner Date history] — Gray & Sons editorial, Gray & Sons
* [https://professionalwatches.com/rolex-submariner-reference-guide/ Rolex Submariner Reference Guide] — unknown, Professional Watches
* [https://professionalwatches.com/rolex-submariner-reference-guide/ Rolex Submariner Reference Guide] — Professional Watches editorial, Professional Watches
* The Vintage Rolex Field Manual, Chevalier Edition — Morning Tundra, unknown
* ''The Vintage Rolex Field Manual'' — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra


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

Latest revision as of 04:20, 30 April 2026


Submariner -> 116618

The 116618 is the full 18k yellow-gold Submariner Date of the Cerachrom era, in production from roughly 2008 to 2020 on caliber 3135. Rolex has offered a full yellow-gold Submariner Date in every generation since the 1680/8 arrived in 1969, and the 116618 is the fifth chapter of that line — the first one to pair the full-gold case with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel.

Within its own generation it is the overt statement. The steel 116610LN is the workhorse; the white-gold 116619LB is a stealth play that reads as steel on the wrist; the 116618 reads unambiguously as gold, in every light.

Yellow-gold Submariner, Cerachrom
Yellow-gold Submariner, Cerachrom

Core facts

detail value
reference 116618 (LN = black, LB = blue)
family Submariner Date
production about 2008 to 2020
movement caliber 3135 (date, quick-set, 28800 bph, ~48hr power reserve)
case 40mm Super Case, full 18k yellow gold
crystal sapphire with Cyclops
water resistance 300m
bezel Cerachrom ceramic (blue or black), gold-filled numerals
lume Chromalight (blue glow)
bracelet full gold Oyster ref.93258 with Glidelock, polished center links
rehaut engraved ROLEX ROLEX
predecessor 16618
successor 126618LB / 126618LN

Gold Submariner lineage

Rolex has offered a full yellow-gold Submariner Date across every major generation since 1969.

reference years notes
1680/8 1969–~1977 First gold Submariner; nipple hour markers; early blue dials prone to tropical aging
16808 ~1977–1988 Transition reference; same basic construction
16618 1988–2008 Last aluminum-bezel gold Sub; predecessor to 116618
116618 ~2008–2020 First ceramic-bezel gold Sub; Super Case; Glidelock
126618LB / LN 2020–present 41mm; caliber 3235; thinner lugs; 21mm bracelet; $48,600 retail

Where it sits in the generation

The 116618 is the full-gold member of the ceramic-era Submariner generation, sitting alongside the steel 116610, the Rolesor 116613, and the full white-gold 116619LB. The two precious-metal models — 116618 and 116619LB — launched together around 2008 as the first Submariners with Cerachrom ceramic bezels. The steel 116610LN and two-tone 116613 followed in 2009–2010. In practice, the gold references were the initial rollout vehicle for ceramic in the Submariner family.

What changed from the 16618

The same generational package that the 116610LN brought to steel arrived on the gold Submariner: Cerachrom ceramic in place of aluminum, Glidelock clasp in place of Fliplock, the Maxi Case with broader lugs, Chromalight lume in place of SuperLuminova, and an engraved rehaut. The 16618's aluminum bezel had been subject to fading under UV exposure. Cerachrom eliminates that pathway — see the bezel section below for detail.

Production outline

The 116618 ran for roughly twelve years with both LB (blue) and LN (black) variants available throughout, and no major mid-run changes documented beyond the standard ceramic-era specification.

Case, bezel body, crown, crown guards, bracelet, and case back are all 18k yellow gold, which makes the 116618 one of the heaviest Submariner references in any generation. Rolex Forum owners report a total weight near 227.5g fully linked, and the density is obvious on the wrist compared to a steel 116610LN or even a Rolesor 116613.

Movement notes

Caliber 3135 throughout — the same movement that powers the 116610, the 116613, and the 116619LB. Quick-set date, 28,800 vph, Microstella regulation, and a Parachrom blue hairspring. The Parachrom spring is Rolex's paramagnetic niobium-zirconium alloy, more resistant to magnetic interference than older hairspring alloys, and a meaningful attribute for a watch worn around electromagnetic fields. The 3135 is case-material-agnostic — the same movement goes into steel, two-tone, yellow-gold, and white-gold Submariners — so the 116618's premium over the 116610LN runs entirely on materials and finishing rather than on mechanical difference.

The successor 126618 moved to caliber 3235, which brought a 70-hour power reserve, the Chronergy escapement, and updated regulation. That is the functional gap between the 116618 and the current gold Submariner.

Dial map

Blue dial (LB)

Like the two-tone 116613LB, the blue-dial 116618LB went through a dial-finish transition during production. Earlier examples carried a flatter blue; later production moved to the more pronounced sunburst blue that became the standard across the gold Submariner line. The exact timing on the 116618LB is less well-documented than on the two-tone reference.

The sunburst blue is the 116618's signature configuration. In shadow it reads deep midnight blue; in full direct sunlight it reaches pale sky blue. The gold Maxi markers and hands amplify that optical range — more reflective surface area than a steel-cased model carries, so more interaction with changing light. Paired with the blue Cerachrom and the yellow-gold case, the dial produces a warm-gold-framing-cool-blue palette that no other Submariner configuration replicates. The Rolesor 116613LB comes close, but the steel outer links and case back dilute the gold presence. On the 116618 there is no steel anywhere.

Black dial (LN)

Black dial with gold Maxi markers. Black against a full gold case reads more formal than the blue, closer to a tuxedo than to a sport watch.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

Case

The entire case is 18k yellow gold: body, bezel, crown, crown tube, crown guards, and case back. Super Case construction — wider lugs and more substantial crown guards than the 16618. Triplock crown, sealed to 300m.

A 40mm case on a 20mm bracelet. The successor 126618 moved to 41mm with thinner, more tapered lugs and a 21mm bracelet; Fratello's 126618LB review noted the new lugs are pointier, closer to the original 1680/8 lineage, and a step back from the blocky Maxi Case aesthetic. That makes the 116618's broader-lug Super Case the maximum expression of that Maxi-era geometry.

Bezel

Cerachrom ceramic — the generation-defining upgrade. No fading, no scratching in the way the aluminum inserts on the 16618 faded and scratched. Numerals and graduation marks on the 116618 are filled with gold rather than the platinum used on the steel and white-gold models, matching the yellow-gold aesthetic of the case. The gold-filled numerals are unique to the 116618 within its own generation.

Crystal

Sapphire with Cyclops over the date window. The inner rehaut is engraved with repeating ROLEX ROLEX text and the serial number at 6 o'clock.

Hallmarks

Hallmarks follow the standard Swiss precious-metal system. The 750 stamp — indicating 18k, 750 parts per thousand fine gold — should appear on the case and case back. The St. Bernard "Barry" mark is the Swiss precious-metals stamp used post-1995.

Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes

Bracelet

The 93258 is a full 18k yellow-gold Oyster with Glidelock extension, offering roughly 20mm of micro-adjustment. The polished center links catch and reflect light against the brushed outer links, creating a play of finishes down the wrist; the Vintage Rolex Field Manual cites this as a distinctive quality of the gold Submariner bracelets, absent on the steel 116610LN where the Oyster is entirely brushed.

Full-gold construction makes this one of the heaviest bracelets in the Submariner catalog. The bracelet does not change during the run; every 116618 carries the same Glidelock-equipped 93258.

Production volume estimates

Industry estimates from the early 2010s put gold Submariner production at roughly 8,000 units per year across both gold references (116618 and 116619LB combined). If those figures held steady across the 116618's twelve-year run, its share would add up to a modest total — but Rolex does not publish production figures, and the number circulates among dealers and collectors rather than from any factory source.

Market and collector context

The 116618 trades in a different segment than the steel Submariners. Buyers choosing a 116618 are not comparing it to a 116610LN — the price gap is too wide for that to be a real cross-shop. The real competition is other precious-metal sport watches and the white-gold sibling, the 116619LB.

The successor 126618LB retails at $48,600 USD. The 116618 trades on the secondary market at a meaningful discount to that figure, reflecting the 40mm case, the older caliber 3135, and the lack of current warranty. The blue LB is the more commonly traded dial; the black LN is less frequently encountered and sometimes trades at a modest discount.

No specific lot-level auction data has surfaced for the 116618 yet. The reference is recent enough that dealer market pricing is the more relevant signal for most examples; the gold Submariner's auction prominence belongs to the 1680/8 and the earlier references, while the 116618 circulates primarily through the dealer market.

Sources