Reference:16718: Difference between revisions

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<small>[[Reference:gmt-master|GMT-Master]] → '''16718'''</small>
<small>[[Reference:gmt-master|GMT-Master]] → '''16718'''</small>


[[File:Ref 16718 hero.webp|thumb|right|300px]]
[[File:Ref 16718 hero.webp|thumb|right|340px]]
[[File:Ref 16718 bezel-closeup.webp|thumb|right|300px]]
 
[[File:Ref 16718 early-black.webp|thumb|right|300px]]
[[File:Ref 16718 gold-oyster.webp|thumb|right|300px]]


The [[Reference:16718|16718]] is the solid yellow-gold GMT-Master II of the [[Reference:16710|16710]] era. It takes the independent GMT-hand system inherited from the [[Reference:16760|16760]] and puts it into a full-gold case, well before the ceramic era rewrote the look of the family. In the current source set it is one of the clearest reminders that precious-metal GMTs are not side notes. They are their own collector lane.
The [[Reference:16718|16718]] is the solid yellow-gold GMT-Master II of the [[Reference:16710|16710]] era. It takes the independent GMT-hand system inherited from the [[Reference:16760|16760]] and puts it into a full-gold case, well before the ceramic era rewrote the look of the family. In the current source set it is one of the clearest reminders that precious-metal GMTs are not side notes. They are their own collector lane.
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== Dial map ==
== Dial map ==


[[File:Ref 16718 early-black.webp|thumb|right|280px|Early black 16718]]
The source set supports two branches, but not equally.
The source set supports two branches, but not equally.


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== Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes ==
== Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes ==


[[File:Ref 16718 bezel-closeup.webp|thumb|right|280px|Black 24-hour bezel close-up]]
The case is the expected full-gold five-digit Oyster case with sapphire and a 24-hour aluminum insert. The biggest unresolved issue here is not the case or crystal. It is the branch map. The Field Manual table leans toward a black-bezel LN reading, while Revolution states the watch came in black-dial/black-bezel and brown-dial/bronze-bezel forms. That conflict should stay visible; the article should not pretend the source set has resolved it.
The case is the expected full-gold five-digit Oyster case with sapphire and a 24-hour aluminum insert. The biggest unresolved issue here is not the case or crystal. It is the branch map. The Field Manual table leans toward a black-bezel LN reading, while Revolution states the watch came in black-dial/black-bezel and brown-dial/bronze-bezel forms. That conflict should stay visible; the article should not pretend the source set has resolved it.


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== Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes ==
== Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes ==


[[File:Ref 16718 gold-oyster.webp|thumb|right|280px|Gold Oyster bracelet]]
The direct black examples among documented examples both show gold Oyster presentation, and the later one adds stronger box-and-papers support. That surviving-market baseline leans Oyster, which is not the same as a universal original-delivery rule for the whole reference; Jubilee fitment existed as a retail option as well.
The direct black examples among documented examples both show gold Oyster presentation, and the later one adds stronger box-and-papers support. That surviving-market baseline leans Oyster, which is not the same as a universal original-delivery rule for the whole reference; Jubilee fitment existed as a retail option as well.



Revision as of 04:39, 18 April 2026


GMT-Master16718

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The 16718 is the solid yellow-gold GMT-Master II of the 16710 era. It takes the independent GMT-hand system inherited from the 16760 and puts it into a full-gold case, well before the ceramic era rewrote the look of the family. In the current source set it is one of the clearest reminders that precious-metal GMTs are not side notes. They are their own collector lane.

The challenge with the 16718 is not whether it counts as a serious reference. It does. The problem is that the direct market layer is much stronger for black-dial examples than for brown ones, even though the collector literature supports both configurations.

Core facts

detail value
reference 16718
family GMT-Master II
production roughly 1989-2007
movement caliber 3185, with late 3186 noted in the Field Manual
case 40mm solid yellow-gold Oyster case
crystal sapphire with Cyclops
water resistance 100m
bezel black in the surviving market examples, with brown branch support in collector literature
key identity solid-gold GMT-Master II with stronger black-branch documentation than the current direct brown layer

Where it sits in the line

The 16718 is the solid-gold partner to the steel 16710 GMT-Master II and the two-tone 16713. Reading from the gold branch alone, the predecessor is the 16758, which still sat on the old side of the family split with its linked-hand logic. The 16718 replaces that behavior with a separately adjustable 24-hour hand. The later ceramic gold GMTs move the look further toward overt luxury; the 16718 is the gold watch that fully crosses into GMT-Master II behavior while still keeping the classical five-digit case shape.

Production outline

The broad production frame is stable at 1989–2007, though the branch picture in the direct source set is still incomplete.

Black branch

The black dial is the best-supported direct branch among documented examples. Both an early and a later black example sit among surviving examples, which makes the black watch the safest baseline for the article.

Brown branch

The brown branch is supported by Revolution, the Field Manual, and the broader Root Beer family material. The direct corpus does not yet hold a dedicated brown 16718 sale page, so the configuration is documented in collector literature but under-represented in direct-sale evidence.

What the collector literature actually says is worth pulling forward. Revolution’s two-part GMT-Master II survey treats the brown-dial solid-gold configuration as a period-correct retail option alongside the black version, with bronze-tinted bezel inserts that read warmer than a plain brown. The Field Manual’s gold GMT-Master section places the brown solid-gold watch inside the Root Beer continuity that runs from the 1675/8, through the 16758, into the 16718. The Sotheby’s Root Beer guide does the same. None of these sources include a 16718-specific hammer-price chart. They treat the brown branch as genuinely produced and genuinely scarce. The honest line for buyers is that a brown 16718 with period-correct dial, bezel, and hands is documented in the collector record, even when direct-sale examples are sparse, and any watch offered today deserves archive papers and dial-foot photography rather than trust by catalogue claim.

Movement notes

The movement story is straightforward by late-five-digit Rolex standards. Caliber 3185 ran for most of the production window, with late examples documented on the updated 3186 in the Field Manual, and GMT-Master II independent-hour functionality is present throughout. This is not a watch that needs to be read as a transitional mechanical reference. Its complexity is on the collector-market side, in branch survival, dealer inventory density, and how little of the brown side appears in direct sale material.

Dial map

Early black 16718

The source set supports two branches, but not equally.

Black branch

This is the direct branch. The package holds an early black example and a cleaner later black example, which is enough to write the branch confidently.

Brown branch

The brown branch is supported in the collector literature, particularly in Revolution and the Root Beer family material, but it remains under-imaged and under-observed in direct sale terms. The article names it, explains the context, and states that the current package is stronger on black than on brown.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes

Black 24-hour bezel close-up

The case is the expected full-gold five-digit Oyster case with sapphire and a 24-hour aluminum insert. The biggest unresolved issue here is not the case or crystal. It is the branch map. The Field Manual table leans toward a black-bezel LN reading, while Revolution states the watch came in black-dial/black-bezel and brown-dial/bronze-bezel forms. That conflict should stay visible; the article should not pretend the source set has resolved it.

One dial detail deserves more space. Gold GMT-Master II dials use applied hour markers set inside fine gold surrounds, and the surrounds themselves evolved across the run. Early 16718 dials carry the narrower surround style inherited from the 16758, with a more pronounced bevel around each lume plot and a warmer gilt coronet that matches the case colour. Later dials widen the surround slightly and move toward a flatter, more uniform baton geometry. The change is gradual and no clean service-parts catalogue line has been published, but side-by-side images in the Revolution and Sotheby’s Root Beer materials show the two styles clearly enough. A buyer examining a specific 16718 should match the surround style, the coronet tone, and the dial foot printing against the serial range before accepting a late-period attribution, because later service dials occasionally turn up on earlier cases.

Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes

Gold Oyster bracelet

The direct black examples among documented examples both show gold Oyster presentation, and the later one adds stronger box-and-papers support. That surviving-market baseline leans Oyster, which is not the same as a universal original-delivery rule for the whole reference; Jubilee fitment existed as a retail option as well.

Late-production 16718 examples from roughly 2000 onward are the ones most likely to surface today with a full set. Typical content for a well-kept late gold watch includes the outer card sleeve, the green-and-gold inner presentation box, the punched warranty card with a matching five-digit serial, the product booklets in the appropriate language, the hang tag with its red Rolex seal, and the anchor-crown chronometer swing tag. Earlier 16718 examples more often arrive with card and booklets but without the outer sleeve or the hang tag, simply because owners discarded the outer layer sooner. Full-set late examples command a market premium that auction catalogues consistently name, though the Sotheby’s guide does not publish reference-specific numbers. Buyers chasing strict originality tend to prioritise the punched warranty card over the outer packaging, because the card ties directly to the watch and can be cross-checked against dealer stamps and country of delivery.

Special branches

Black-dial branch

The strongest direct branch among documented examples and the best current path for a first article illustration.

Brown branch

Revolution, the Field Manual, and the Sotheby’s Root Beer guide all treat the brown solid-gold 16718 as a period-correct retail configuration with a bronze-tinted bezel insert. Direct sale examples are sparse in auction catalogues but documented in dealer inventory. A certified pre-owned 1993 watch, sold with Rolex CPO papers, lists the brown Root Beer dial alongside the yellow gold case and caliber 3185 movement, and it is the cleanest recent direct-sale anchor for the brown branch.

Scarcity angle

Collector editorial sources add a useful collector-market point. Slow in-period sales may explain why the reference feels scarcer than many buyers expect today. That is not a production figure, but it is useful collector context.

The broader pattern is consistent with what auction cataloguers report for late-run precious-metal sports Rolexes. Gold GMT-Master II watches sold slowly at retail through the 1990s and early 2000s, and many examples spent their first decade worn only lightly by their original owners before entering the secondary market. The result is twofold. Unpolished gold 16718 examples with sharp lugs and crisp bezel-fitment gaps are easier to find than an equivalent 16710, because there was less wrist time to wear them down. And the total installed base is smaller than the production span suggests, which is why clean examples can disappear from dealer inventories quickly despite a nominally 18-year run. Production numbers have never been published by Rolex, so the scarcity claim remains a market observation rather than an archival fact.

Historical market and auction record

The market layer is still direct-sale heavy, but the branch coverage has widened. The early black example gives the package one anchor near the start of the run. The later black example gives a cleaner late-run baseline with packaging support. A certified pre-owned 1994 black-dial 16718 on yellow gold Oyster, caliber 3185, priced at $40,000, anchors the mid-1990s black branch with current retail context. A documented 1988 solid-gold example on Horween leather carries a blue insert, which is unusual enough that the claimed configuration should be read as a data point rather than a normal production branch. A documented 1993 brown Root Beer example with Rolex CPO papers closes the longstanding gap for a direct brown-branch sale anchor. Collector editorial sources frame the watch in the context of gold sports Rolex sales softening through the 1980s and 1990s, which is the broader market reason clean examples are harder to find than the 18-year production span would suggest.

The main gap has shifted. The article now has direct black and brown-branch anchors and a named retail price point from a large CPO dealer. A Phillips, Sotheby’s, or Christie’s hammered auction result would still strengthen the record, because every current anchor is a retail or CPO listing rather than an auction sale.

Sources