Reference:6200: Difference between revisions
| [checked revision] | [checked revision] |
Text audit: voice, clarity, source links |
Fix A296 framing on 6200: full-rotor uni-directional, not bumper. Rolex never produced bumper calibers |
||
| Line 81: | Line 81: | ||
== Movement notes == | == Movement notes == | ||
The 6200 runs caliber A296, an 18-jewel | The 6200 runs caliber A296, an 18-jewel full-rotor automatic measuring 29.5mm across. A296 is a uni-directional Perpetual derived from the Aegler 765 / 775 base — the rotor swings 360°, not on bumper springs (Rolex never produced a bumper caliber; the 1931 Perpetual patent went straight to free-rotation). The A296 was a better fit for the big-crown case than the smaller 26.4mm A260 used in the 6204. Collector writing sometimes renders the caliber as A296/775 or A2966; the underlying movement is the same, and the A2966 spelling should be treated with caution until a primary movement source confirms it. | ||
<span id="dial-map"></span> | <span id="dial-map"></span> | ||
Revision as of 23:46, 29 April 2026
Submariner -> 6200
The 6200 is the rarest Submariner reference ever made. Nicholas Foulkes, working with direct Rolex archive access for the first authorised book on the Submariner (Rolex, October 2024), put the production figure at 303 units. No other Submariner reference comes close. The 6200 is the high-specification big-crown branch built while the Submariner was still finding its shape: 8mm Brevet crown, 200m depth rating, no crown guards, and an Explorer 3-6-9 dial on the most desirable examples.

Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 6200 |
| family | Submariner |
| production | approximately 1953 to 1956 |
| total production | 303 units (Foulkes, October 2024) — lowest of any Submariner reference; independent serial number analysis estimates ~300 |
| serial number range | approximately 320xxx to 322xxx |
| case | 36mm, fatter profile than the 6204 |
| crown | big 8mm Brevet |
| movement | caliber A296 |
| depth rating | 200m |
| dial | Explorer-style 3-6-9 markers on gilt dial (key variant), radium lume |
| hands | extended Mercedes-type |
| crown guards | none |
| crystal | acrylic |
Where it sits in the line
The 6200 sits beside the small-crown 6204 and 6205, but it is the big-crown branch that points to the later 6538 and 5510. The small-crown watches rated to 100m; the 6200 doubled that to 200m, with a larger engraved "BREVET" crown and a thicker case to match. The Twinlock double-gasket system was still years away. Case diameter stayed at 36mm, but the profile sits noticeably fatter than the 6204 to clear the deeper rating and the larger crown tube. The 6200 also wears larger on the wrist than the 6536 or the 6538 that followed it.
Serials cluster between roughly 320xxx and 322xxx — a single concentrated run rather than a band stretched across years of production.
Production outline
Sources place the 6200 in a 1953 to 1956 window, with most production landing in 1954 to 1956. Colin A. White's The Vintage Rolex Field Manual starts the run a year earlier, in 1953. The short run reads as an experiment. Rolex was still working out what the Submariner was supposed to be, and the high-specification big-crown approach proved too specialised for volume. The 6538 picked up the big-crown identity at greater scale a few years later, but the 6200 is where the idea was first tried.
Movement notes
The 6200 runs caliber A296, an 18-jewel full-rotor automatic measuring 29.5mm across. A296 is a uni-directional Perpetual derived from the Aegler 765 / 775 base — the rotor swings 360°, not on bumper springs (Rolex never produced a bumper caliber; the 1931 Perpetual patent went straight to free-rotation). The A296 was a better fit for the big-crown case than the smaller 26.4mm A260 used in the 6204. Collector writing sometimes renders the caliber as A296/775 or A2966; the underlying movement is the same, and the A2966 spelling should be treated with caution until a primary movement source confirms it.
Dial map
The key branch is the Explorer dial: 3-6-9 numerals at the hour cardinals in place of the standard baton markers. The configuration drives the strongest 6200 auction results and most of the collector attention, because it lands a layout associated with the Explorer line onto one of the earliest Submariners.
Explorer dials appear across several early references — 6200, 6538, 5510, 5512, 5513. The prevailing view among collectors is that Rolex used them as a substitute when supplies of the correct Submariner dial ran short during early production. Logan Baker, writing for Phillips in 2019, counted only fifteen Explorer-dial Submariners ever sold by the house across the entire early family.
Two Explorer-dial variations
Two distinct Explorer-dial layouts exist on the 6200. The earlier one carries a smaller coronet logo and no "Submariner" text, showing only Oyster Perpetual above the hands and the depth rating below. The later layout adds the larger logo and "Submariner" text while keeping the 3-6-9 format. Both are extremely rare against the 303-unit total.
Radium lume on surviving examples typically shows spotting, a period-correct deterioration caused by the aggressiveness of the material over decades. Spotting confirms originality.
Red depth rating
A distinct variant carries the depth rating printed in red instead of the standard gilt. It is the single highest-value 6200 configuration, and the highest-value vintage Submariner ever sold at auction.
Gilt finish
All known 6200 dials are glossy gilt — gold printing on a glossy black lacquer ground. Tropical examples, where the black lacquer has aged to brown or chocolate, draw the strongest collector attention; every surviving piece is meaningful against a 303-unit total.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown
This is the first big-crown Submariner and the first to rate to 200m. The 8mm Brevet crown and the 3-6-9 Explorer-dial option are what turn an early Submariner into an outright outlier.
Documented bracelet fitments are the 6636/64 stretch rivet and the 7206/64 rivet. One known example wears a Big Logo Swiss rivet bracelet with a 4/56 clasp code. Another runs on a later rivet bracelet with a 1969 clasp code, the kind of service-life drift common on watches this old. A third sits on a fabric pull-through because the original bracelet is long gone, which is the usual fate of early Submariner bracelets.
Special branches
Explorer dial
The Explorer-dial branch is the main reason the 6200 commands the prices it does. A 3-6-9 Explorer layout on a Submariner case at the earliest moment of the line, across a reference that produced only 303 pieces, sits among the most desirable early Submariner configurations on the market.
No-text dials (smaller logo)
Explorer-dial examples without "Submariner" text form a secondary branch inside the Explorer-dial category. They are treated as earlier production and add a further layer of rarity to an already rare reference.
Red depth rating
The red depth rating variant is the single highest-value 6200 configuration. Only a handful of examples are known.
Historical market and auction record
Three results define the 6200 auction record.
A red depth rating 6200 sold for over USD 1,000,000 in June 2018, the highest Submariner price recorded at auction up to that point. The result established the 6200 as a seven-figure watch.
Phillips Geneva then sold an Explorer-dial 6200 for CHF 596,000 in May 2019 and a second for CHF 403,200 in May 2022. Two six-figure Explorer-dial lots in three years at the same house reads as a settled valuation. The spread between the two probably reflects condition specifics; both watches landed comfortably in the same tier.
Of the fifteen Explorer-dial Submariners Phillips has sold across the early family, two are 6200s — a meaningful concentration on a reference of only 303 pieces.
Documented examples include one with detailed original-owner provenance, one wearing a tropical Explorer-style service dial with an early bezel and a Big Logo bracelet, and a third with an unusually rich original-owner story. Together they map most of what is publicly known about how the surviving population presents.
Sources
- Throw Back Thursday - The Rolex 6200 Submariner from Original Owner — Bernhard Bulang, Bulang and Sons
- History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 1, The Early References — Tom Mulraney, Monochrome
- 1954 Rolex Submariner 6200 — WatchCollecting.com, WatchCollecting
- 1954 Rolex Submariner Big Crown 6200 with Tropical Explorer 3, 6, 9 Dial and Big Logo Bracelet — HQ Milton, HQ Milton
- 1954 Rolex Submariner 6200 Big Crown Tropical 3, 6, 9 Dial — Tropical Watch, Tropical Watch
- Rolex Submariner 6200 — Amsterdam Vintage Watches, Amsterdam Vintage Watches
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
- Reference Points: Understanding The Rolex Submariner — Stephen Pulvirent, Hodinkee
- In-Depth: A Review of Vintage Rolex Submariners with Explorer Dials — Logan Baker, Phillips
- Submariner — Nicholas Foulkes, Rolex