Main Page: Difference between revisions
| [unchecked revision] | [unchecked revision] |
trigger sitemap Tags: Blanking Reverted |
Undo revision 655 by Maintenance script (talk) Tag: Undo |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
__NOTOC__ | |||
<div style="display:none;">{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="display:none;">BezelBase</span>}}</div> | |||
{{#seo: | |||
|title=BezelBase — Watch Reference Encyclopedia | |||
|description=A hobby-driven encyclopedic reference for Rolex watches. Starting with the Submariner — every reference, every variant, every era. Historical context, production details, and collector notes. | |||
|keywords=watch reference, Rolex, Rolex Submariner, vintage Rolex, collector guide, watch history, production history, dial variants | |||
}} | |||
<div style="max-width: 800px; margin: 0 auto; padding: 0 1em;"> | |||
Rolex changed what a wristwatch could be. The Oyster case made watches waterproof. The Perpetual rotor made them self-winding. The Submariner made them dive-rated. The Daytona timed races. The GMT-Master crossed time zones for Pan Am pilots. These are not just expensive objects — they are engineering milestones that shaped an entire industry, and every one of them has a production history worth documenting properly. That is what this project is for. | |||
We kept running into the same problem: the good information is scattered across forum threads that get buried, auction archives behind paywalls, out-of-print books trading for more than the watches they describe, and dealer sites that disappear when the business closes. So we started consolidating it. Every claim here traces to a named source. Where sources contradict each other — and they do, constantly — both sides are shown. [[BezelBase:About|How this is built →]] | |||
== Reference library == | |||
<div style="display: flex; flex-wrap: wrap; gap: 1.5em; margin: 1em 0;"> | |||
<div style="flex: 1; min-width: 280px; background: #f8f8f8; border: 1px solid #ddd; border-radius: 4px; padding: 1.2em;"> | |||
=== [[Reference:submariner|Submariner]] === | |||
We started here because the Submariner is the reference that never lets you stop researching. Thirty-nine distinct references across seventy years of production. The 6204 showed up in 1953 with a 100m depth rating and no crown guards, and by the time you get to the current 126-series the watch has been through gilt dials, matte dials, aluminum bezels, ceramic bezels, acrylic crystals, sapphire crystals, and more bracelet configurations than most people realize exist. A single reference like the 5513 ran for 27 years and produced enough dial variants to fill its own taxonomy. We have 36 articles live — each one covers specs, movement history, dial variants, bracelets, and whatever the auction record actually says. | |||
'''Highlights:''' | |||
* [[Reference:6538|6538]] — the James Bond Submariner | |||
* [[Reference:5513|5513]] — 27-year production run, the broadest vintage reference | |||
* [[Reference:1680|1680]] — first Submariner Date, Red Sub and White Sub eras | |||
* [[Reference:16610|16610]] — the 23-year benchmark modern Submariner | |||
* [[Reference:116610LV|116610LV]] — the "Hulk," now a modern collectible | |||
* [[Reference:114060|114060]] — the last 40mm no-date, "the last small Sub" | |||
'''[[Reference:submariner|→ Full Submariner index]]''' | |||
</div> | |||
</div> | |||
</div> | |||
[[Category:BezelBase]] | |||
Revision as of 02:18, 15 April 2026
Rolex changed what a wristwatch could be. The Oyster case made watches waterproof. The Perpetual rotor made them self-winding. The Submariner made them dive-rated. The Daytona timed races. The GMT-Master crossed time zones for Pan Am pilots. These are not just expensive objects — they are engineering milestones that shaped an entire industry, and every one of them has a production history worth documenting properly. That is what this project is for.
We kept running into the same problem: the good information is scattered across forum threads that get buried, auction archives behind paywalls, out-of-print books trading for more than the watches they describe, and dealer sites that disappear when the business closes. So we started consolidating it. Every claim here traces to a named source. Where sources contradict each other — and they do, constantly — both sides are shown. How this is built →
Reference library
Submariner
We started here because the Submariner is the reference that never lets you stop researching. Thirty-nine distinct references across seventy years of production. The 6204 showed up in 1953 with a 100m depth rating and no crown guards, and by the time you get to the current 126-series the watch has been through gilt dials, matte dials, aluminum bezels, ceramic bezels, acrylic crystals, sapphire crystals, and more bracelet configurations than most people realize exist. A single reference like the 5513 ran for 27 years and produced enough dial variants to fill its own taxonomy. We have 36 articles live — each one covers specs, movement history, dial variants, bracelets, and whatever the auction record actually says.
Highlights:
- 6538 — the James Bond Submariner
- 5513 — 27-year production run, the broadest vintage reference
- 1680 — first Submariner Date, Red Sub and White Sub eras
- 16610 — the 23-year benchmark modern Submariner
- 116610LV — the "Hulk," now a modern collectible
- 114060 — the last 40mm no-date, "the last small Sub"