Reference:6204: Difference between revisions
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|title=Rolex 6204 — BezelBase | |title=Rolex 6204 — BezelBase | ||
|description=The 6204 is the first Submariner. | |description=The 6204 is the first Submariner. Rolex had made dive-capable Oysters before it, but this is the first reference to carry the Submariner name, and that is what gives it its place. | ||
<small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] → '''6204'''</small> | <small>[[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] → '''6204'''</small> | ||
Revision as of 16:38, 24 April 2026
{{#seo: |title=Rolex 6204 — BezelBase |description=The 6204 is the first Submariner. Rolex had made dive-capable Oysters before it, but this is the first reference to carry the Submariner name, and that is what gives it its place.
Submariner → 6204
The 6204 is the first Submariner. Rolex had built dive-capable Oyster cases before, but the 6204 is the first reference number to carry the Submariner name. It is the starting point of a line that runs through every Submariner made since.

Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 6204 |
| family | Submariner |
| production | approximately 1953 to 1954 |
| case | 37.5mm sans crown (per RolexHaven measurement; same case as 6205) |
| crown | small, marked “BREVET” |
| movement | caliber A260, non-butterfly rotor design, automatic/perpetual rotor |
| depth rating | 100m (not displayed on dial) |
| hands | pencil (extremely rare in original condition), lollipop seconds hand |
| crown guards | none |
| crystal | acrylic |
Where it sits in the line
The 6204 is the starting point of the early Submariner family. It runs alongside the big-crown 6200 and is directly succeeded by the 6205. All three share the earliest no-crown-guard Submariner case, but the 6204 is the small-crown, lower-rated fork that establishes the core identity.
The 100m depth rating is half that of the contemporary 6200, a direct consequence of the smaller crown tube and slimmer case. That small-crown geometry becomes the template for the 6205 and eventually the 5508, while the big-crown path runs separately through the 6200, 6538, and 5510.
Production outline
Known case numbers fall in the 949xxx to 988xxx range, prior to Rolex's serial number reset from 999,999 back to 10,000 around 1954. The gap of roughly 50,000 numbers between early Waffle Dial examples (949xxx) and later Submariner-dial examples (988xxx) suggests batched production with design changes between runs.
Rolex first showed the 6204 publicly at the Basel fair in 1954, with production running for approximately one year. This is the introductory commercial release, before the design split into the distinct small-crown and big-crown paths. Surviving examples surface mostly through specialist dealers and major auction houses, and even compromised pieces attract serious attention.
Collector discussion often pushes the 6202 Turn-O-Graph as the direct visual parent of the 6204, and that is the cleanest way to place the watch. Published sources do not firmly support every sub-variant claim around the launch, so the 6204 should still be treated cautiously at the edges.
Movement notes
The 6204 runs caliber A260, a non-butterfly bumper automatic with a 26.4mm diameter. A bumper is a rotor that oscillates between springs rather than rotating in a full circle — the standard Rolex automatic of the period. Menta identifies the A260 in its archive example, consistent with the published caliber for this reference. The A260 is the smaller and less capable of the two early Submariner calibers; the higher-specification 6200 runs the larger A296.
Dial map
The 6204 sits squarely in the glossy gilt world: gold printing on a glossy black lacquer ground, across every known dial variant.
Black gilt dial
The standard 6204 dial is glossy black lacquer with gilt-coloured printing. Pencil hands (straight, thin hour and minute hands without the Mercedes-style cutouts that arrive later with the 6205) pair with a lollipop-tip seconds hand. A chapter ring — the minute-track ring printed around the dial edge — frames the dial.
Honeycomb gilt dial
Some 6204 examples carry a honeycomb-textured gilt dial. Honeycomb here means a waffle-like texture pressed into the dial surface instead of the smooth lacquer of the standard version. These are less common and treated as a separate branch by collectors.
Sub-Aqua variants
Sub-Aqua signed dials exist for the British market. The dial text reads "Sub-Aqua" in place of "Submariner" and represents a regional variant rather than a separate model.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

The 6204 is a slim no-crown-guard Submariner with a small Brevet crown, early friction bezel, and the simpler no-hash insert format. It still reads closer to the Turn-O-Graph world than to the mature late-1950s Submariner.
The caseback carries an octopus figure but no date engraving. Some references place the 100m depth rating on the dial; others hold that the 6204 dial does not display the rating. The caseback side is the more reliably documented. The 100m rating is the entry-level spec for the first Submariner; the 200m rating stayed with the big-crown 6200.
Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes



The original bracelet was a spring-loaded Swiss rivet type made by Gay Freres. Fixed 20mm end links are typically stamped "65" or "64", and the clasp carries a quality-control date code. Gay Freres was a respected Swiss bracelet manufacturer later acquired by Rolex in 2001. Documented fitments are the 6636/64 stretch rivet and the 7206/80 rivet.
Sotheby's 2025 Lot 433 includes box and guarantee, making it one of the very few 6204 examples with documented original packaging. Menta's archive example wears a 1954-dated bracelet with 65 end links — period-correct evidence even if it does not settle the original-delivery question for every example.

Special branches
Sub-Aqua signed dial
The Sub-Aqua signed dial is the obvious side branch. These British-market examples carry "Sub-Aqua" in place of "Submariner" and are treated as a distinct variant by specialists.
Honeycomb dial
Honeycomb-textured dials form a secondary branch. They are less common than the standard smooth gilt and attract collector attention for the texture alone.
Historical market and auction record
Sotheby's 2025 Lot 433 gives the cleanest direct lot page and includes box and guarantee — exceptional provenance for a watch from 1953 or 1954. Menta adds a strong example sourced from the original owner's family in Argentina, with detailed case, dial, and movement documentation.
As the first Submariner, the 6204 sits at the origin of the line. Prices have consistently tracked at the top of the early Submariner market, driven more by that historical position than by absolute rarity — the 6200 is rarer in production terms, but the 6204 is where the name begins.
Sources
- RolexHaven.com variant pages: 6204 Waffle Dial / 6204 Split Logo / 6204 Submariner / 6204 Sub-Aqua
- Reference 6204 Submariner, A Stainless Steel Automatic Wristwatch With Gilt Dial And Bracelet, Circa 1953 — Sotheby's, Sotheby's
- Rolex 6204 Submariner — Menta Watches, Menta Watches
- History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 1, The Early References — Tom Mulraney, Monochrome
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Morning Tundra