Reference:16610LV
Submariner -> 16610LV
The 16610LV is the Kermit, a nickname so entrenched that major auction houses use it alongside the reference number. Rolex released it at BaselWorld 2003 for the 50th anniversary of the Submariner and ran it until 2010, when the ceramic-bezel 116610LV took over. The LV stands for Lunette Verte, French for green bezel.
Black aluminum bezel inserts had defined the Submariner line for decades. The green insert broke that continuity as a deliberate anniversary statement, and the bezel is what the Kermit is remembered for.

Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 16610LV |
| nickname | Kermit |
| family | Submariner Date |
| production | autumn 2003 to 2010 |
| introduced | BaselWorld 2003 (50th anniversary of the Submariner) |
| movement | caliber 3135, COSC, 28,800 vph |
| case | 40mm, 904L steel, no drilled lug holes |
| crystal | sapphire with Cyclops, LEC present from introduction |
| water resistance | 300m / 1000ft |
| crown | Triplock screw-down |
| bezel | unidirectional 60-click, green anodized aluminum insert |
| dial | black, Maxi dial (enlarged lume indices, wider hands than standard 16610) |
| lume | Super-Luminova |
| bracelet | Oyster ref.93250, solid end links (SEL), Oysterlock clasp |
| first delivery serials | Y serial (2001–2002 range); also early F serials (Oct–Dec 2003) |
| successor | 116610LV "Hulk" |
Where it sits in the line and why it matters
The 16610LV is a platform variant of the 16610 rather than a separate design. Case, movement, crystal, crown, and bracelet are identical across the two. The external differences are the green aluminum bezel insert and a Maxi dial with enlarged hour indices and slightly wider hands. Those two changes carry the entire collecting story.
The green bezel Submariner lineage runs:
- 16610LV Kermit (2003–2010): green aluminum bezel, black dial
- 116610LV Hulk (2010–2020): green ceramic bezel, green dial
- 126610LV Starbucks (2020–present): green ceramic bezel, black dial
The Kermit is the founding member of that run and the only one built on an aluminum bezel. That aluminum-only status is also what gives the Kermit its distinct authentication problem: a 16610 with an aftermarket green insert can pass for a Kermit in ways a steel 16610 never could for a 116610LV.
Colin A. White's The Vintage Rolex Field Manual records the 16610LV as the first Submariner with enlarged lume indices. The Maxi dial format later became standard on the 116610LN and every Submariner reference after it. The Kermit is the original application.
Production outline
First delivery and early serials
The 16610LV was introduced at BaselWorld 2003, with first deliveries in autumn 2003. White documents that the first examples carried Y-serial numbers. Y serials correspond to the 2001 to 2002 band in the Rolex sequential serial system; those movements were produced earlier and held for the anniversary release. Additional first-delivery examples carried early F serials from October to December 2003 as the watch moved into regular retail.
Y-serial Kermits look anomalous only against an assumption that case production and retail sale happened in the same year. Rolex did not work that way; a 2003-sold watch with a Y-serial case is normal.
Collectors specifically seek Y-serial Kermits as the earliest production examples of the reference and the first green-bezel Submariners ever delivered. An F-serial Kermit from the same autumn 2003 delivery window also counts as an early example and is priced accordingly.
No drilled lug holes
The 16610LV arrived without drilled lug holes; Rolex had removed lug holes from the standard 16610 around the same time. No standard production 16610LV exists with drilled lug holes. Prototype pieces with drilled lugs were given to Rolex executives and are not production watches. Drilled lug holes on a 16610LV are either a rare executive prototype or a sign of case fraud.
Bezel variants and color evolution
Two changes track the bezel across the run. The first is typographic: the Flat Four insert of the early years gives way to the Pointed Four from about mid-2005, and the Flat-versus-Pointed split is still the quickest way to sort early from later examples. It pairs with the dial-mark progression noted below — Flat Four runs with MK I through MK III, Pointed Four with MK IV onward.
The second change is color. The green aluminum insert was not a single uniform shade across the seven-year run, and Rolex Forum collectors have documented a progressive evolution:
- Y-serial (~2003 delivery): bright lime green with a metallic finish
- F-serial (~2004–2005): pure green metallic
- D-serial (~2005–2006): lighter lime tone
- Z-serial (~2006–2007): lighter green
- M-serial (~2007–2008): deepest green, non-metallic finish
The overall trajectory moved from a bright, metallic lime green on the earliest examples to a deeper, flatter green on late production. Two original, unfaded Kermit bezels from different production years may look noticeably different, a point that matters both for authentication and for understanding why bezel appearance varies across genuine examples.
Dial variants: seven marks (MK I through MK VII)
Rolex Forum research, particularly the classification work by JBP (VRF) and Mondani, identifies seven distinct dial marks across the 16610LV production run. The identification points are subtle: the shape of the "O" in ROLEX (oval versus round), the positioning of the "R" in "Oyster" relative to the "R" in "Rolex," the number of tick marks spanned by "SWISS MADE" at 6 o'clock, and the presence or absence of rehaut engraving.
JBP (VRF) and Mondani use different classification systems. JBP combines dial and bezel variants into a single numbering scheme (a "Mark" in JBP's system may refer to a dial-and-bezel combination). Mondani classifies dials only. The summary below follows the combined approach, noting bezel type where it is part of the Mark definition.
- MK I: Oval "O" in ROLEX. "SWISS MADE" at 6 o'clock spans about 5 tick marks. Flat Four bezel. Serials about Y96xxxx to F47xxxx (~September 2003 to June 2005). The earliest production configuration.
- MK II: Transitional. Variations in "O" shape and "R" positioning distinguish it from MK I. Still paired with Flat Four bezel. Limited serial window.
- MK III: Further transitional variation. Subtle differences in letterforms from MK II. Still Flat Four bezel era.
- MK IV: Oval "O" in ROLEX. The "R" in "Oyster" sits directly under the right foot of the "R" in "Rolex." "SWISS MADE" spans about 3 tick marks. Pointed Four bezel. Appears from about July 2005 onward.
- MK V: Round "O" in ROLEX (a visible change from the earlier oval). Variations in "R" positioning and minute marker details distinguish it from MK IV.
- MK VI: Round "O." Further variation in "R" positioning and marker details from MK V.
- MK VII (final): Round "O" in ROLEX. Serial number engraved on the inner rehaut, the defining feature that separates MK VII from all earlier marks. Appears from about August 2008 onward and runs through end of production.
The progression from MK I through MK VII tracks the full production run. Early marks (MK I especially) carry the strongest collector premiums. MK VII, with its rehaut engraving, is the easiest to identify and represents the final production specification.
A full taxonomy requires side-by-side comparison of dial printing under magnification. Forum threads with high-resolution macro photography are the primary reference for these distinctions. Casual identification is reliable only for MK I (Flat Four bezel, oval O, wide SWISS MADE) and MK VII (rehaut engraving). The intermediate marks require experienced eyes.
"Franken" warning
The secondary market for the 16610LV carries a real Franken-watch risk. The many dial and bezel generations make it easy to build a plausible-looking but wrong watch, so the dial, bezel, and serial all have to agree before the buyer pays a variant premium.
Authentication — bezel swap fraud
The green aluminum insert from a 16610LV fits a standard 16610 case. A 16610 fitted with an aftermarket green insert can be passed off as a Kermit at the Kermit premium, and the swap is one of the most common frauds in the modern Submariner market. The countermeasure is simple but has to be applied consistently.
Authentication starts with the caseback, then the Maxi dial, then the papers, and only then the bezel. The green insert is the easiest part to fake or swap, so it gets verified last against everything else.
The ceramic 116610LV Hulk cannot be faked this way; its Cerachrom bezel cannot be swapped without obvious mechanical disruption. That closed the fraud vector for the successor and concentrated scrutiny on aluminum-bezel Kermits.
Y-serial authenticity verification
The Y-serial Kermit is the most collectible tier and the most scrutinized. A Y serial paired with a 2003 purchase date is the expected pattern, not an anomaly: Rolex held earlier-numbered movements for the anniversary release.
One specific fraud vector matters here. A Y-serial watch with a worn or service-replaced bezel warrants close examination, since the Y serial could come from a legitimate early movement or could mark a case swap. The check list runs caseback engraved 16610LV with Y-range serial, matching movement serial, original green bezel with natural aging, and ideally a full set confirming 2003 purchase. A single element out of alignment may be innocent; each gap requires its own explanation.
Movement notes
Caliber 3135, identical to the standard 16610. Nothing about the movement is specific to the anniversary variant, and COSC chronometer certification applies throughout the run.
Dial map
The dial is glossy black in the Maxi format, with white-gold surround markers and a date window at 3. Super-Luminova throughout the run; no tritium dial ever appeared on this reference.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown
Case, crystal, and crown are identical to the contemporary 16610. The LEC (Laser Etched Crown) in the sapphire crystal was present from the first deliveries; the 16610LV arrived already in the post-2003 anti-counterfeiting configuration.
The bezel insert is green anodized aluminum rather than the Cerachrom ceramic that arrived with the 116610LV Hulk in 2010. The green color fades with time under UV and physical wear, a known aging characteristic of anodized aluminum.
Bezel fading and authentication
Factory green anodized aluminum bezels fade under UV and physical wear over years of use. A correctly faded Kermit bezel shows even lightening across the green field, shifting toward a lighter green or grayish-green while the numerals and dive-scale markings remain legible. That is honest wear. Complete fading to pale gray or near-white is uncommon and signals decades of heavy sun exposure.
A service replacement insert is the primary alternative explanation for an unworn-looking bezel. The giveaway is a saturated, uniform, new-looking green that no 2003 watch should still wear unless it was stored unused or the insert was replaced. A service insert with thin-font Luminova plots is an obvious replacement. One with correct thick-font printing but new condition is subtler, still detectable against a correctly aged original.
Collectors prefer honestly worn bezels to replaced ones, and a replacement fitted at any service, including Rolex, requires disclosure. The pearl at 12 o'clock sits in the green field rather than the black field of the standard 16610.
Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes
The 16610LV ships on the 93250 Oyster bracelet with solid end links across the entire run. Stamped end links never appeared on this reference. The clasp is the period diver's-extension Oysterlock, not the Glidelock that arrived with the 116610.
Packaging follows the Rolex period standard for 2003 to 2010. Boxes, papers, and hang tags from these years are well-documented in the market, and complete sets carry both a market premium and an authentication advantage.
Collectibility and market position
The Kermit trades at a consistent premium over the standard 16610. Three things drive it: a shorter production run of about seven years against the 16610's twenty-three, the anniversary significance, and the verified-original premium that the bezel-swap problem creates for any honest example.
Within the reference, Y-serial early-delivery watches sit at the top, followed by early F-serial examples. MK I Flat Four dials carry a premium over later marks, consistent with the general vintage pattern where the first production configuration is most prized. Sotheby's catalogs the Kermit, Hulk, and Starbucks as a recognized collecting lineage.
Sources
- The Rolex Submariner: A Complete Collector's Guide — Stephen Pulvirent, Sotheby's
- History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 2, The 55XX References and 1680 Date — Tom Mulraney, Monochrome
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra