Reference:6205

From BezelBase
Revision as of 14:58, 29 April 2026 by Admin (talk | contribs) (Strip auction prices/hammer wording from intros and prose body per CLAUDE.md hard rule #10 + user feedback. Auction record stays in dedicated section. Replace "hammered at"→"sold for" / "hammer"→"sale" in remaining prose.)


Submariner -> 6205

The 6205 is the second small-crown Submariner and the reference where Mercedes hands first appear on a Rolex dive watch. Both pencil-hand and Mercedes-hand configurations are documented within 6205 production, splitting the run into two series. Phillips Game Changers 2019 lot 54 (case 21,354, hammer USD 162,500) is the canonical pencil-hand survivor; the bulk of the recorded corpus carries Mercedes. the Phillips Logan Baker article (2024) credits the 6200 and the 6205 jointly with the Mercedes-hand introduction; Hodinkee, Hairspring, Bob's, Le Monde Edmond, and Bulang all attribute the Mercedes hand specifically to the 6205. Both readings appear in the corpus.

Rolex Submariner Ref. 6205
Rolex Submariner Ref. 6205

Core facts

detail value
reference 6205
family Submariner
production 1954–1955 (Sotheby's, Phillips, Antiquorum, Monochrome, Hairspring, Bob's, Bulang, Wind Vintage, Le Monde Edmond consensus); Rolex Passion Report extends to 1953–56; Wikipedia gives 1953–57
total produced approximately 810 examples
case 37mm
crown 6mm (Hairspring, Mulraney/Monochrome late-series); 5.3mm ; the 6mm and 5.3mm figures coexist in the literature
crown markings Rolex coronet with the "+" Swiss-made sub-mark
movement caliber A260, 19 jewels (carried over from 6204)
depth rating 100m (caseback only — no documented original 6205 dial in the surfaced corpus carries depth-rating print)
hands pencil with lollipop seconds (Series 1) → Mercedes with lollipop seconds (Series 2)
crown guards none
crystal acrylic

Where it sits in the line

The 6205 sits between the 6204 and the 5508 on the small-crown branch. The 6204 (1953–54) and the 6205 (1954–55) share the no-crown-guard case and the A260 movement; the 6205 introduces Mercedes hands and is the last Submariner to launch before the line splits cleanly into the small-crown 5508 and the big-crown 5510 in 1958. On the big-crown branch the 6200 ran concurrently with the 6205 in 1954, and the 6538 followed.

Two case-number bands document the production. Earliest examples sit in the 21,3xx–21,6xx range — Phillips lot 54 carries case 21,354, Sotheby's 2022 lot 13 carries 21,442, and Antiquorum's 2025 Geneva lot 377 carries 21,644. A second band runs 85,9xx–86,0xx (Sotheby's 2019 lot 178 at 85,972; Sotheby's 2025 lot 336 at 86,033), with Bulang documenting an 988,xxx pre-reset 1955 example outside both bands. Rolex's 1954 serial reset from 999,999 back to 10,000 explains the apparent gap between bands. Bulang is the only source to publish a hard production figure — about 810 examples — and that single-source estimate has not been corroborated by the auction houses or by Foulkes (2024), which gives 2,881 for the 6204 but does not break the 6205 out separately.

Production outline

The 6205 ran for approximately one year. Specialist consensus across Sotheby's, Phillips, Antiquorum, Monochrome, Hairspring, Bob's, Bulang, Wind Vintage, and Le Monde Edmond converges on 1954–55. Rolex Passion Report (Philipp Stahl, 2017) extends the window to 1953–56; Wikipedia gives 1953–57 — the latter is an outlier that does not appear in the auction-house or specialist-dealer corpus. Goldammer's 2024 reading of The 2024 Submariner book argues the 6204, 6200, and 6205 all hit the market around Basel 1954, with the 6204 first.

The reference subdivides into two series. Series 1 (early 1954) carries a clean dial without "Submariner" text, pencil hands, and a lollipop seconds hand inherited from the 6204. Series 2 (still 1954, into 1955) brings "Submariner" back to the dial and introduces Mercedes hands paired with the same lollipop seconds. Monochrome's 2020 Submariner history (referencing Eric Wind) makes the Series 1 / Series 2 framing explicit; (Gustafson, 2018) and Le Monde Edmond (2014) corroborate that pencil-hand examples exist but are rare. The Phillips article 2024 article complicates the Mercedes-hand claim by crediting both the 6200 and the 6205 with the introduction; reading those sources together, the cleanest framing is that 6200 and 6205 ran concurrently in 1954 and both adopted Mercedes hands, with the 6205 sometimes treated as first, sometimes joint-first.

Movement notes

The 6205 runs caliber A260, the 19-jewel automatic carried over from the 6204 (Hodinkee, Hairspring, Wind Vintage, Phillips). Sotheby's 2024 lot 288 catalogued the movement as "cal. 765 automatic, 18 jewels," which is almost certainly a cataloguing artifact rather than a 6205 movement variant — every other documented 6205 movement-number entry in the corpus reads A260. Antiquorum's 2025 Geneva lot 377 confirms cal. A260 with 19 jewels at case 21,644.

A260 architecture is shared across the early 6204/6205/6200 production. Rolex Passion Report frames it as the 9¾-ligne movement that fed forward into the 1030 architecture; the A260 designation is the early-production Rolex factory stamp for the bumper-rotor configuration that earlier Oyster Perpetuals had used. Service-replacement movements turn up occasionally — late-life refits replaced A260s with cal. 645 or cal. 765, both later automatics — and a non-A260 movement number on a 6205 case argues for a service event.

Dial map

Gilt dial — applied markers, no depth rating text
Gilt dial — applied markers, no depth rating text

Every documented 6205 dial is glossy black gilt — gold-toned printing on a black-lacquered ground in the period galvanic technique. No depth-rated 6205 dial surfaced in the auction-house or dealer corpus surveyed; depth-rating text is consistently absent from original 6205 dials. Honeycomb-textured 6205 dials do not surface in the surveyed corpus either — Monochrome refers to honeycomb texture options generically alongside the gilt finish, but no auction lot or specialist dealer documents a 6205 with honeycomb. Treat honeycomb as 6204 territory, not 6205.

Clean dial (Series 1, no Submariner text)

The earliest 6205s carry a gilt dial without the "Submariner" wording. The A specialist listing carries this configuration as the earliest documented; Antiquorum's Geneva 2025 lot 377-180 carries a no-Submariner-text reprinted dial in case 21,644 and sold for CHF 16,250. Phillips Game Changers 2019 lot 54 (case 21,354) is the canonical original-condition Series 1 example: pencil hands paired with lollipop seconds, no "Submariner" text on the dial, hammer USD 162,500. Monochrome's 2020 Submariner history attributes the removal of the wording to "reasons unknown"; collector speculation has pointed at trademark timing, with no primary-source confirmation.

Submariner-signed dial with Mercedes hands (Series 2)

Smooth screw-down caseback with bubble profile
Smooth screw-down caseback with bubble profile

The Series 2 dial puts "Submariner" back above the centre post, in the same gilt construction over a glossy black lacquer ground. The Mercedes hour hand pairs with a baton minute hand and the same lollipop seconds carried over from Series 1. The Phillips article 2024 piece notes the early Mercedes hour hand reads markedly longer than later versions — a "first iteration" silhouette that distinguishes Series 2 6205s from later 5508 / 5512 / 5513 hand sets. Sotheby's 2022 lot 13 (case 21,442) documents Mercedes hands paired with a stretch riveted Oyster bracelet on a low-movement-number example; Sotheby's 2019 lot 178 (case 85,972) and Sotheby's 2025 lot 336 (case 86,033, restored by Rolex Atelier de Restauration in 2023) bookend the late-band Series 2 corpus.

Signed dial with chapter ring

A subset of Series 2 dials adds a chapter ring — the minute-track ring printed around the dial perimeter. Specialist documentation records a 1955 example with a gilt chapter-ring "Submariner" dial paired with the Mercedes hour hand and a 7206/80 bracelet (clasp 1 55). One specialist-documented 1954 example carries a chapter-ring "Submariner only" dial paired with a red-triangle bezel insert. Treat chapter-ring presence as variant-dependent within Series 2 rather than universal.

Tropical gilt and Atelier-restored

Tropical 6205 dials — black gilt that has shifted to brown under sustained UV — sit at the top of the desirability ladder for the reference. Sotheby's 2025 lot 336 documents an Atelier de Restauration 2023 restoration on case 86,033, and the CHF 40,000–80,000 estimate reflects the Atelier provenance premium. Antiquorum's 2025 Geneva lot 377 carries a re-lumed dial alongside an original chapter-ring lollipop-seconds layout, and the CHF 16,250 hammer represents the lower end of the restored / reprinted-dial market.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

Small crown case profile — no crown guards
Small crown case profile — no crown guards
Domed crystal and bezel — top view
Domed crystal and bezel — top view

The 6205 case measures 37mm without crown, with a 47mm lug-to-lug profile. It carries the no-crown-guard architecture and acrylic crystal common to the early Submariner family. The early friction-rotating dive bezel sits unchanged from the 6204; Editorial coverage places the bezel in the same lineage as the 6202 Turn-O-Graph that preceded it. The bezel insert reads no-hash on Series 1 examples (no minute graduations between zero and 15); One specialist-documented 1954 example documents a red-triangle insert with the twelve-o'clock marker filled in red enamel — an early bezel-style outlier.

The crown reads 6mm in dealer and editorial documentation (Mulraney's late-series figure) and 5.3mm in others. Both figures appear consistently across reputable sources without resolution. The crown carries the Rolex coronet with the "+" Swiss-made sub-mark beneath. The caseback signs "Brevet +" with the octopus symbol and does not carry the "R" or "Patented" wording that surfaces on later references. The caseback wears smooth without a date stamp on the exterior; the interior carries the reference and case number.

A small group of 6205 cases carry a "stainless steel" engraving between the lugs at the 12 o'clock position. HQ Milton's inv. #5080 is the canonical documented example. The engraving is uncommon and does not represent a standard 6205 feature.

Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes

Original-delivery bracelets bifurcate by case-number band. Early Series 1 examples in the 21,3xx–21,6xx case band ship with a Gay Frères stretch riveted Oyster, 20mm fixed end-links stamped 65 or 64 (Rolexhaven, Phillips Game Changers lot 54, Wind Vintage). Late-band examples in the 85,9xx–86,0xx range and the 988,xxx pre-reset tail ship with the 7206 riveted Oyster, 80 end-pieces, and a clasp date code typically reading 1-55 — Specialist documentation records the 7206/80 with clasp 1 55 on a 1955 case head, and Rolex Passion Report documents the same configuration with clasp 1-'55 on case 85.85x. Both fitments are period-correct depending on the head's date.

Service-era replacements turn up frequently. One specialist-documented 1954 example wears a USA C+I rivet 11/80 with clasp 1-61 — a late-1950s service swap rather than original delivery. The clasp date code is the diagnostic; a clasp dating later than the case head implies either a swap or a service-era replacement. Examples carrying genuine 1954–1955 clasp codes paired with the matching case band are the rarity, not the norm.

Historical market and auction record

Sale Lot Year Serial Variant Hammer
Phillips Game Changers NY 54 2019 21,354 pencil hands, no-Submariner dial, riveted Oyster end-link 65 USD 162,500
Sotheby's Important Watches NY 178 2019 85,972 Mercedes, gilt no depth est. USD 20,000–30,000
Sotheby's Watches Online 3 45 2020 85,972 Mercedes + large seconds, no Submariner text noted est. USD 20,000–30,000
Sotheby's Fine Watches 13 2022 21,442 Mercedes + lollipop, gilt gloss est. GBP 10,000–20,000
Sotheby's Important Watches Part II 288 2024 21,465 gilt black; movement catalogued cal. 765 (likely error) est. CHF 10,000–30,000
Sotheby's Important Watches II 336 2025 86,033 Atelier de Restauration 2023 restoration est. CHF 40,000–80,000
Antiquorum Geneva 377 2025 21,644 re-lumed reprinted dial, A260 19j CHF 16,250

The 6205 trades on the Series 1 / Series 2 split. Phillips's pencil-hand 21,354 example anchors the upper end of the unmolested-original market at USD 162,500. Restored or reprinted-dial examples sit at the lower end — Antiquorum's 2025 Geneva lot 377 cleared at CHF 16,250 against a 5,000–10,000 estimate. The 6205 is where the modern Submariner silhouette starts; the Mercedes hand introduction here defines the line through the 5508, the 5512, and the 5513 and forward.

Sources