Reference:6511

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Day-Date6511

The 6511 is the fluted-bezel half of the original Day-Date. Rolex showed it at the Basel Fair in 1956 next to the smooth-bezel 6510; the two references are mechanically identical and parted only by the finish of their bezels. The fluted bezel the 6511 carried became the visual signature of the Day-Date and has stayed on the model for seventy years. The 6510's smooth bezel did not survive the originals era. Both wear the first-generation caliber 1055, and both launched on a Jubilee bracelet rather than the President — the bracelet that gives the line its nickname arrives a year later with the 6611.

The cataloged run lasts a single year before the 6611 takes over. Surviving cases push the production window earlier than the launch itself: the two earliest documented examples were made in 1955, ahead of the Basel debut. The patent history, the origin of the Presidential nickname, and the full originals-era roster belong to the 6510 entry. What follows is specific to the 6511 — its bezel, its dials, its metals, and a well-populated auction record.

Rolex Day-Date 6511 in yellow gold on a Jubilee bracelet
Rolex Day-Date 6511 in 18k yellow gold on a Jubilee bracelet — the fluted Millerighe bezel that became the Day-Date signature.

Core facts

detail value
reference 6511
family Day-Date
catalogue debut Basel Fair 1956
production 1956–1957 cataloged; earliest documented cases made 1955
movement caliber 1055, first generation (no Microstella, no COSC, gradual midnight changeover, pre-SCOC dial line)
case 36mm 18k gold Oyster — yellow gold (production-volume), pink gold (uncommon), white gold (rare, disputed at launch)
crystal acrylic
bezel fluted ("Millerighe")
bracelet Jubilee (the President bracelet arrives with the 6611 in 1957)
crown Twinlock screw-down
sibling 6510 (smooth/domed bezel, parallel 1956 launch)
successor 6611 (1957 — Microstella cal 1055B, COSC, President bracelet)

Where it sits in the line

The 6510 and 6511 launched together as a bezel-finish pair. Everything else about them matches: the 36mm Oyster case, the Twinlock crown, the acrylic crystal, the first-generation caliber 1055, the Jubilee bracelet, the single cataloged year. The bezel is the one intended difference. The 6510 took the smooth, gently domed bezel; the 6511 took the fluted "Millerighe" bezel, the corrugated edge Rolex had used on the Datejust through the early 1950s. Of the two finishes, the fluted one became the Day-Date's identity, which is why the 6511 reads today as the more familiar of the originals even though the 6510 carries the lower number.

The pair sit apart from the rest of the originals-era cluster on two counts. They are the only Day-Date references to use the first-generation cal 1055, and the only two to ship on the Jubilee. From the 6611 onward the line moves to the Microstella-regulated, COSC-certified second-generation caliber and to the President bracelet, and the "Superlative Chronometer Officially Certified" dial designation appears for the first time. The 6511 is the last fluted-bezel Day-Date before the President bracelet that the design is now inseparable from.

Production outline

Rolex debuted the 6510 and 6511 together at the Basel Fair in 1956, but production had already started: the earliest documented 6511 cases, 111,654 and 134,692, were both made in 1955, before the public launch. Case numbers on surfaced examples run from that 1955 cluster up to 166,725 in 1956, a narrow band consistent with a short run. No Rolex archival production figure has surfaced for the reference.

By 1957 the 6611 replaces the 6511. The change is mechanical and aesthetic at once: the upgraded caliber, the President bracelet, and the new chronometer-certified dial all arrive together, so the 6511 marks the end of the first Jubilee-and-1055 phase of the Day-Date rather than a model that ran alongside its successor. The whole originals-era cluster gives way to the 1803 and its siblings around 1959.

Movement notes

The 6511 carries the first-generation caliber 1055, the founding day-date complication movement and a caliber it shares only with the 6510. It runs at 18,000 vph (2.5 Hz) on 25 jewels, measures 28.50mm across and about 7.0mm tall, and holds roughly 42 hours. It has no Microstella balance, no COSC certification, and a gradual rather than instant changeover at midnight: the early caliber lacks the stored torque to flip both the day disc and the date through in a single impulse, so the two calendars settle into place over a window either side of twelve. That changeover is the deficiency usually blamed for the reference's single-year life. The 6611's second-generation caliber, internally a 1055B, fixed it in 1957 alongside the free-sprung Microstella balance and COSC certification. The full caliber lineage sits on Reference:Movements.

The dial designation on the 6511 is pre-SCOC, reading either "Superlative Chronometer by Official Test" or "Officially Certified Chronometer" depending on the example; the four-line "Superlative Chronometer Officially Certified" block is the 6611's introduction. Auction catalogues occasionally mis-state the caliber. Phillips listed the movement of its 1955 yellow-gold lot as a 1555, a caliber that did not exist until the 1803 era; a watch of this date carries the 1055.

Dial map

 
The pre-SCOC dial reading "Officially Certified Chronometer", with the full-word day aperture at twelve. Image via Antiquorum.

Surfaced 6511 examples spread across several factory dial colours, all sharing the period layout: the full-word day aperture at twelve, the date at three under a Cyclops, applied faceted gold indices, dauphine or alpha hands, and radium lume.

dial indices / detail chronometer line documented on
champagne / gold applied faceted gold batons, red printed "Day-Date", red date wheel pre-SCOC yellow gold (Phillips 2015 lot 40)
silvered / white applied faceted gold batons, red "Day-Date" "Officially Certified Chronometer" yellow gold (Antiquorum 2008 lot 81; Monaco Legend 2024 lot 220)
black gloss / lacquer applied gold indices, radium plots pre-SCOC less common; yellow and pink gold
pink red-and-black date none printed pink gold (Phillips 2015 lot 41)

The pink-gold Phillips lot is the clearest evidence that some early dials carry no chronometer line at all, a pre-certification quirk rather than a refinish. A small number of examples add a depth rating to the dial — one Monaco Legend yellow-gold lot reads "50 m = 165 ft" beneath the centre, a holdover from period Oyster dial practice. Day discs follow the retail market: English is the rule, and a Portuguese-calendar disc is documented on at least one yellow-gold example. Grey and tropical-brown dials surface on aged examples, the result of radium oxidation and lacquer breakdown over seventy years rather than a separate factory finish; black-dial pink-gold examples that have gone tropical command their own following.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

The 6511 uses the 36mm three-piece Oyster case that becomes the Day-Date standard for the next five decades: screw-down Twinlock crown, screw-down caseback, acrylic crystal. The case is the same one the 6510 wears; the bezel is what sets the reference apart.

That bezel is the fluted "Millerighe," the finely corrugated ring Rolex carried over from the early Datejust. Sources differ on what to call it: some describe the early pattern as fluted, others as a tighter "coin-edge" cut, but the labels point at the same physical bezel rather than a factual split. The flutes are cut into solid 18k gold matching the case. This is the bezel that defines the Day-Date silhouette, and the 6511 is where it enters the line.

The metals are where the sources genuinely disagree. Yellow gold is the production-volume case material and pink gold is confirmed but uncommon, the pink-gold Phillips lot settling that variant directly. White gold and platinum are contested: Fratello lists both among the originals' metals, while Rolex Magazine limits the 1956 launch to 18k pink and yellow gold, and no white-gold or platinum 6511 has surfaced in the auction record. The documented platinum piece of the originals era is the diamond-set 6612, not a 6511.

Bracelets, end links, and clasps

 
The 18k yellow-gold Jubilee bracelet — the period-correct fitment before the President bracelet arrived with the 6611.

The period-correct 6511 fitment is the Jubilee, the five-link bracelet Rolex had used as its house luxury band since the late 1940s. A Monaco Legend yellow-gold lot still wearing its original yellow-gold Jubilee is the cleanest confirmation. The President bracelet, the three-link semi-circular band designed for this watch, does not arrive until the 6611 in 1957, and here the sources split: Fratello describes the originals as delivered on the President under an earlier name, while Monochrome and the surfaced examples place them on the Jubilee.

In practice the bracelet on a surviving 6511 proves little. Confirmed lots turn up on Presidents, on "Big Logo" bracelets, and on later brick-link bands — a Bonhams example wears an 18ct bracelet hallmarked 1959, three years after the case. These are period swaps and service replacements; the clasp code dates the bracelet, not the watch head.

Auction record

The 6511 is the better-documented of the two originals at auction, helped by Phillips's inaugural watch sale. Confirmed lots:

sale date metal result notes
Phillips, Glamorous Day-Date, Geneva, lot 40 9 May 2015 yellow gold CHF 191,000 case 111,654 (Q4 1955), full set with guarantee dated 7 May 1957, wallet and box; highest standard-gold result and earliest documented case
Phillips, Glamorous Day-Date, Geneva, lot 41 9 May 2015 pink gold CHF 56,250 case 134,692 (1955), pink dial with no chronometer line; confirms the pink-gold variant
Monaco Legend, Exclusive Timepieces 35, lot 220 19 Oct 2024 yellow gold EUR 50,700 case 166,725 (1956), original yellow-gold Jubilee, "50 m = 165 ft" dial
Monaco Legend, Exclusive Timepieces 31, lot 22 22 Apr 2023 yellow gold EUR 35,100 case 111,695 (1956), grey patinated dial, Portuguese day disc
Antiquorum, Revolution, New York, lot 81 17 Apr 2008 yellow gold USD 24,000 "Officially Certified Chronometer" dial; billed as the first yellow-gold 6511 at the house
Bonhams, London, lot 156 23 Nov 2004 yellow gold unsold Glasgow import mark 1956; later 1959-hallmarked bracelet

A clean standard-gold 6511 has settled into roughly the EUR 35,000–55,000 band in recent sales, with the Phillips full-set yellow-gold lot a clear outlier on the strength of its papers and pre-launch date. Further pink-gold and tropical-dial lots appear in the aggregated record at Christie's and Antiquorum but have not been confirmed against the houses' own lot pages.

One result sits outside the band entirely. Monaco Legend sold a steel 1955 prototype with a tropical dial and a gold bezel for EUR 1,196,000 in October 2024, an example from John Goldberger's collection published in Pucci Papaleo Editore's Day-Date — The Presidential Rolex (Spin Edizioni, 2015). Its reference is disputed: Monaco Legend catalogued it as a 6511, while Sotheby's and Monochrome attribute the five known steel pre-launch prototypes to the 6611. Either way it is a record-tier one-off, not a guide to the standard-production market.

Sources