Reference:16660

From BezelBase

The 16660 is the watch the 1665 should have been once Rolex had a decade of saturation-diving data to work from. Same case profile, same helium escape valve at 9 o'clock, same dive-bezel silhouette. Everything else changes — and changes simultaneously, in one reference jump. The crystal moves from domed acrylic to flat sapphire. The bezel goes from bidirectional to unidirectional. The crown goes from Twinlock to Triplock. The depth rating doubles from 610m / 2000ft to 1220m / 4000ft. The movement gains quickset date through caliber 3035. Production runs roughly ten years, 1978 to 1988 (with 1989 deliveries clearing into the 16600 takeover), parallel with the late 1665 for the first five years and on its own for the last five. Collectors call it the Triple Six — for the three sixes in the reference number, not the depth rating and not a Satanism reference; the nickname crystalised in collector chatter post-production and stuck. Rolex's own marketing copy called it the "Sea-Dweller 4000" after the new depth rating.

Core facts

detail value
reference 16660
family Sea-Dweller
collector nickname "Triple Six" (from the reference number's three sixes — not a Satanism reference, not the depth rating); period Rolex marketing called it the "Sea-Dweller 4000"
production 1978 to 1988; 1989 deliveries clear into 16600 introduction; Rolex April 1989 catalogue already shows the 16600 successor
movement caliber 3035 throughout the run — 27 jewels, 28,800 vph (4 Hz), quickset date, ~42 hour power reserve; balance cock supported one end with glued-collet hairspring (the known cal 3035 weakness the cal 3135 later engineered out via the full balance bridge)
case 40mm, ~14.5mm thick, helium escape valve at 9 o'clock, Triplock screw-down crown
crystal flat sapphire — first Sea-Dweller with sapphire (1665 ran domed acrylic to its 1983 end)
bezel unidirectional ratcheted 60-minute black aluminium insert — first unidirectional bezel on a Sea-Dweller (the 1665 was bidirectional)
crown Triplock screw-down with three internal gaskets — first on the Sea-Dweller line; the 1665 used Twinlock
depth 1220m / 4000ft (doubled from the 1665's 610m / 2000ft)
dial families matte (MK0 to MK2 Beyeler "Pallettoni") and glossy (MK3 Stern "Spider", MK4 / MK4 bis Lemrich, MK5 Beyeler "Bicchierini")
dial-mark transition window matte → glossy crossover c. 1983-1984, with overlap into 1985; Rolex's Feb 1985 catalogue still prints matte, Aug 1986 catalogue prints glossy
lume tritium throughout (T SWISS T < 25) — any non-tritium lume on a factory 16660 is a service replacement
COMEX subset ~200 units delivered 1980-1984, two batches: first batch matte (issue #3001-3099) + second batch glossy (issue #3100-3199, four-line SCOC dial with white-gold-surround applied tritium plots)
auction record (COMEX) Phillips Geneva, The Geneva Watch Auction: XI, 10 May 2020, Lot 128 — COMEX matte c.1982, serial 7'336'314, hammer CHF 239,400 against estimate CHF 60,000-120,000
auction record (operator-provenance) Sotheby's Geneva Important Watches GE2601, 10 May 2026, Lot 92 — COMEX 3067, serial 7'336'574, Godart → Johansson dual-diver chain (1982-2005, ~23 years documented professional service including the 1991 transfer at 450m North Sea saturation), estimate CHF 40,000-80,000
predecessor 1665 (parallel production 1978-1983, predecessor production ends 1983)
successor 16600 (introduced 1989, same case + cal 3135 movement — the 3035-to-3135 transition is the reference change, not a mid-production movement swap)

Where it sits in the line

The 16660 is the Sea-Dweller's first sapphire-crystal generation and its first 4000-foot depth rating. The 1665 was the saturation-diving prototype reference; the 16660 is the saturation-diving reference made for the long haul. Same 40mm Oyster case profile across the change, same helium escape valve at 9 o'clock, same general dive-bezel silhouette. The four simultaneous engineering changes that distinguish the 16660 from the 1665 — sapphire crystal, unidirectional bezel, Triplock crown, larger HEV — all enable the doubled depth rating from 610m to 1220m. Each change addresses a specific failure mode that the 1665's architecture had at the new depth target: domed acrylic deforms at 1220m, bidirectional bezels can be bumped clockwise underwater (shortening displayed remaining-air), Twinlock crowns lose sealing margin against the doubled water column, smaller HEV chambers risk insufficient helium decompression rate.

The 16660 is also the last Sea-Dweller on caliber 3035. Every factory 16660 carries the cal 3035 — the cal 3135 launched in 1988 in the Datejust and Submariner 16610 but entered the Sea-Dweller line only with the reference change to the 16600 in 1989. Italian Watch Spotter's English-language Sea-Dweller history page splits the 16660 timeline as "1978-1988: calibre 3035" and "1988-2008: calibre 3135" — that's a categorical error conflating the 16660 with the 16600. Wikipedia's English Sea-Dweller article repeats the same conflation, attributing the 16660 row to 1989-2009 cal 3135 production with a ceramic bezel — that's the 16600 spec set mislabelled as 16660 (and the 16600 didn't get a ceramic bezel either; that's the 116600 four-year run 2014-2017). Two-generation tertiary error.

The Triple Six nickname derives from the reference number 16660 ending in three sixes. Period collector documentation is thin — no 1978-1989 print source uses "Triple Six." The nickname crystalised in the 1990s and 2000s as collector shorthand. Rolex's own marketing called it the "Sea-Dweller 4000" after the new depth rating; that handle still circulates in collector chatter alongside Triple Six. The Satanism association exists in tongue-in-cheek collector chatter but is not the etymology.

Production outline

Matte run (1978 to c. 1983)

The 16660 enters production in 1978 with the matte black dial inherited from late 1665 production, applied tritium plots, dauphine hour and minute hands, and a straight seconds hand. Caliber 3035 inside. Sapphire crystal. Unidirectional bezel. Triplock crown. The four major architectural changes from the 1665 are simultaneous at launch.

Serial range across the matte run: approximately 5.9 million through 8.5 million (1978 through early 1983), with a small overlap into 1984 where late-matte production crosses early-glossy production. The MK0 → MK1 → MK1 bis → MK2 progression across the matte run is Andrea Piccinini's canonical schema, with Beyeler as the sole matte-dial supplier through this period.

The MK1 vs MK2 boundary is the cleanest dial-mark transition in the run. The canonical "f" alignment tell:

  • MK1: the "f" of "4000ft = 1220m" sits above the "E" of "SUPERLATIVE" in the depth-rating line; short coronet under 12 o'clock; "T" of "PERPETUAL" aligns specifically vs the "X" of "ROLEX" (the MK1 bis variant tells differ on this letter alignment).
  • MK2: the "f" of "ft" sits above the "V" of "SUPERLATIVE"; longer coronet sometimes touching the 12 o'clock triangle; thicker print weight overall.

Glossy transition (c. 1983 to 1984)

The matte-to-glossy transition begins around serial 8.0 million in late 1983 and clears through mid-1984. The new glossy MK3 dial is supplied by Stern, with applied white-gold-surround tritium plots replacing the matte-printed plots. The dial print removes the hyphen from "SEA DWELLER" — the canonical MK3 typographic marker.

Glossy MK3 — the spider dial (c. 1983 to mid-run)

The Stern MK3 lacquer chemistry has a documented defect. Under ambient UV exposure and thermal cycling, the gloss black lacquer crazes, bubbles, and opacifies in a web pattern — the canonical "spider" effect (also called "stardust" by some collectors). The pattern reads as a spider web emanating from the centre of the dial outward. Rolex's response was to offer free service-replacement dials through its service network across the production years and into the 16600 era. Many surviving spider-dial 16660s have been swapped to later-supplier MK4 / MK5 dials at service.

Andrea Piccinini's authentication canon distinguishes factory-original spider dials from service replacements via reverse-side analysis — replacement dials match face-on but differ on the back. A 16660 with a "perfect MK5" face but a service-period back is a service replacement, not a factory-original MK5. The reverse-side tells include print supplier markings, plot-attachment geometry, and feet stamping conventions.

Glossy MK4 onward (mid-run to 1988)

Rolex moves dial supply to Lemrich (MK4 and MK4 bis) and back to Beyeler (MK5, "Bicchierini" — Italian for "small glasses," referring to the applied indices' raised crystal-glass appearance). Both suppliers print the SCOC four-line text block at six o'clock. Tritium plots remain factory specification through every dial generation.

End of production (1988 / 1989)

Production winds down in 1988 with the cal 3135 ready to enter the Sea-Dweller line. Rolex's April 1989 catalogue shows the 16600 successor already in print; 1989 deliveries of 16660 inventory clear during the changeover. The clean reading: production ends late 1988, retail availability extends through 1989.

Movement notes

Caliber 3035 throughout the entire 16660 run. The architectural specs:

  • 27 jewels (vs cal 3135's 31)
  • 28,800 vph / 4 Hz
  • Self-winding bidirectional perpetual rotor
  • Quickset date — single-position date advance via the crown's intermediate detent
  • No hacking seconds (the cal 3035 does not stop the seconds when the crown is pulled out)
  • ~42 hour power reserve
  • Balance cock supported one end (the cock-stud architecture that allowed the cal 3035's hairspring to occasionally tangle and the glued collet to come loose — the cal 3135 introduced the full balance bridge specifically to address this)
  • Counter-clockwise crown set direction (the cal 3135 reverses this to clockwise)
  • COSC chronometer certification — every Sea-Dweller dial carries SUPERLATIVE CHRONOMETER OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED text on glossy SCOC dials; the first-batch matte COMEX dials are exceptions with only the two-line text omitting SCOC

The cal 3035 was Rolex's workhorse automatic from 1977 through 1988, used across the Datejust, GMT-Master, Sea-Dweller, and Submariner during the period. The 16660 carries the caliber's full production window — first introduced into the Sea-Dweller line at the 16660's 1978 launch, last fitted to a Sea-Dweller case at the 16660's 1988 end-of-production.

Dial map

Matte MK0 Beyeler "Pallettoni"

Earliest 1978 production matte dial. Pallettoni refers to the chunky printed plot geometry. Sub-100 surfaced examples; the canonical matte-MK0 surfaces in early-1978 serial ranges.

Matte MK1 Beyeler "Pallettoni"

Standard early-production matte dial. The "f" alignment tell: "f" of "4000ft" sits above the "E" of "SUPERLATIVE." Short coronet under 12. The bulk of 1978-c.1982 production carries MK1.

Matte MK1 bis Beyeler

Print-variation sub-mark of MK1 with subtly different letter alignment in the SCOC text block. The "T" / "X" relationship between PERPETUAL and ROLEX is the canonical bis tell.

Matte MK2 Beyeler "Pallettoni"

Late matte production, c.1982-1984. "f" of "ft" sits above the "V" of "SUPERLATIVE." Longer coronet, sometimes touching the 12 o'clock triangle. Thicker print weight.

Glossy MK3 Stern "Bicchierini" — the spider dial

c.1983 to mid-run. First glossy dial. Stern supply. Spider crazing defect under ambient UV and thermal cycling. Rolex offered free service replacement — many factory MK3 dials have been swapped at service.

Glossy MK4 Lemrich "Bicchierini"

Mid-run to late-run. Lemrich supply replaces Stern. Stable lacquer chemistry — no spider crazing on factory MK4.

Glossy MK4 bis Lemrich

Print-variation sub-mark of MK4 with subtle letter-alignment differences.

Glossy MK5 Beyeler "Bicchierini"

Late-run dial. Beyeler returns to supply through the 16660 closeout and continues into the 16600.

"Frozen dial" / late-run milky tritium

Collector observation rather than a factory variant — late-run dials where the tritium has aged to a matte, off-white appearance (sometimes called "stardust" when the underlying glossy lacquer has degraded into stippled opacification). Distinct from spider crazing; this is age-related lume oxidation rather than lacquer chemistry failure.

Tritium throughout

Every factory 16660 carries "T SWISS T < 25" at six o'clock — the post-Bern-Convention (1971) tritium marking. No Luminova or Super-LumiNova on a factory 16660 dial. A 16660 dial with non-tritium lume is a service replacement, full stop. The Sea-Dweller line transition to Luminova happens well into the 16600 era.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes

Caseback typology — Andrea Piccinini's classification

Piccinini documents four caseback typologies across the 16660 production span, with subtle internal-stamp variations marking production-period batches. Standard caseback markings include "ORIGINAL ROLEX DESIGN," depth rating engravings, and serial-period stamps. The COMEX subset carries deep external engravings of the COMEX issue number at the caseback centre — distinct from the period civilian production stamps.

Helium escape valve

Same Swiss patent CH492246 architecture (filed June 1970) as the 1665, but the 16660's HEV carries an enlarged spring chamber and updated gaskets to handle the doubled depth rating. The HEV venting threshold and refill timing remain calibrated to saturation-diving decompression profiles. Monochrome characterises the upgrade as "larger, more reliable" than the 1665's original.

Crystal and crown

Flat sapphire crystal — the 16660 is the first Sea-Dweller with sapphire. The 1665 ran domed acrylic to its 1983 production end. The crystal change enables the doubled depth rating: acrylic would deform at 1220m and fail catastrophically; sapphire holds geometry through the pressure envelope.

Triplock screw-down crown — three internal gaskets, same Triplock architecture the 1680 / 5512 / 5513 carried in their late runs. First Triplock crown on the Sea-Dweller line; the 1665 used Twinlock.

Bezel

Unidirectional ratcheted bezel — black aluminium insert with 60-minute graduation and red triangle at 12 o'clock. Bidirectional bezels (as on the 1665) can be bumped clockwise underwater, shortening the displayed remaining-air interval; unidirectional bezels only bump in the safe direction (extending the displayed remaining-air, which produces a conservative reading). The 16660 is the first Sea-Dweller with the unidirectional bezel that becomes standard across modern dive references from this point forward.

Bracelet, end-links, clasps

The 16660 wears two Oyster bracelet generations across its production:

  • 93150 Oyster — folded link, hollow-end-link construction, end-link code 380. Early-to-mid production fitment. Same architecture the 5512 / 5513 / 16800 Submariner carried in this generation.
  • 93160 Oyster — appears from c.1983, transitions across the rest of the run. End-link code 580 or 592 depending on configuration. Solid-end-link 93160 examples appear from c.1983 but remain rare on production-era 16660s — most period examples are hollow-end-link 93150 even into the glossy run.

The Fliplock diver's wetsuit extension on the clasp is the distinguishing operational feature — a folding extension that adds length to wear over a 7mm dive-suit cuff. Clasp two-letter date codes ("I8" = Q3 1978, "K2" = Q2 1980, etc.) date the bracelet, not the watch head. Service replacements run years ahead of the case.

Clasp evolution tracks the bracelet reference change: large Rolex-logo clasp ("Big Logo") with the early 93150 → flat clasp with the later 93160. The 93150-to-93160 transition timing is documented as c.1983 but inconsistently across sources; some period 93150 clasps surface on watches with later cases through retail-stock allocation lag.

Special branches

COMEX 16660

Rolex delivered approximately 200 COMEX-engraved 16660 units to Compagnie Maritime d'Expertises (Marseille) between 1980 and 1984. Two production batches with internally distinct dial signatures:

  • First batch — matte (COMEX issue #3001-3099, c.1980-1982): matte black dial, COMEX logo printed above 6 o'clock, two-line text below the COMEX logo (4000ft = 1220m + SEA-DWELLER), no SCOC text, painted tritium plots, dial print continues the period 16660 matte typology (MK1 or MK2).
  • Second batch — glossy (COMEX issue #3100-3199, c.1983-1984): glossy black dial, COMEX logo above 6 o'clock, four-line text (adds SUPERLATIVE CHRONOMETER OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED to the depth and reference lines), white-gold-surround applied tritium plots, line order of depth rating and reference swaps from the matte convention.

COMEX issue numbers are deep-engraved on the caseback exterior, centred between the inner rotor and the outer edge. The COMEX logo prints above six o'clock on the dial face. A first-batch matte COMEX case (3001-3099) with a glossy MK3 dial indicates a service-period dial replacement — Rolex offered the spider-dial swap freely, and matte-COMEX cases occasionally returned from service with the glossy MK3 fitted. Piccinini's reverse-side dial analysis distinguishes factory-original from service-replacement.

The 16660 was the last Sea-Dweller delivered to COMEX; the 16600 production years coincided with COMEX's commercial decline and the 16660 closed the procurement relationship.

COMEX 16660 auction anchors

  • Phillips Geneva, The Geneva Watch Auction: XI, 10 May 2020, Lot 128 — COMEX matte, c.1982, serial 7'336'314. Hammer CHF 239,400 against estimate CHF 60,000-120,000. The highest publicly confirmed COMEX 16660 result, anchoring matte-COMEX market band at USD 250k+ for fresh-to-market, full-set, full-accessories configuration.
  • Phillips Geneva, The Watch Auction: One, 9 May 2015, Lot 112 — COMEX 3011, serial 7'122'563, matte. Estimate CHF 60,000-80,000.
  • Antiquorum Monaco, Important Modern & Vintage, 13 July 2024, Lot 152 — COMEX 3044, serial 7'205'232, matte MK1, T < 25, 93150/592 bracelet, AAA overall grade (case 8 / movement 1 / dial 2). Hammer EUR 118,080 against estimate EUR 50,000-150,000.
  • Sotheby's HK, Important Watches, 11 July 2020, Lot 2225 — COMEX 3143, serial 8'559'338, c.1985. Estimate HKD 480,000-720,000.
  • Sotheby's Geneva, Important Watches GE2601, 10 May 2026, Lot 92 — COMEX 3067, serial 7'336'574, c.1982 matte. Godart → Johansson dual-diver provenance. Originally issued by COMEX to Godart (French diver), used over nine years across pressurised chambers, saturation dives, extended decompression. In 1991 during a 450m North Sea saturation dive (reportedly the deepest performed with this specific watch), Godart transferred it to Scandinavian diver Johansson after 33 days working together in extreme conditions. Johansson used it on professional dives until 2005. Total documented professional service: ~23 years (1982-2005), two divers, multi-country operations. Estimate CHF 40,000-80,000. The cleanest two-diver documented provenance chain on a 16660.

Tiffany & Co retailer-signed

A small number of 16660s shipped through Tiffany & Co with the retailer signature printed below the Rolex coronet on the dial. Late-glossy examples surface in private dealer sales (Tempus Padua sold a Tiffany-signed Triple Six at approximately USD 50,000 in private-market transaction). No Tiffany-signed COMEX 16660 has surfaced — the COMEX 16660s shipped directly to Marseille, bypassing Rolex retail channels.

Named COMEX recipients documented in published lots

  • Bernard Kabrane — COMEX divemaster 1980-1990, offshore-platform pipeline welding specialist. Full set surfaced through specialist channels with 11-link 93160/592 bracelet, original COMEX-engraved caseback, and complete COMEX paperwork.
  • Godart → Johansson — see Sotheby's Geneva 2026 Lot 92 above.
  • COMEX 3044 — Antiquorum Monaco 2024 Lot 152, EUR 118,080. Owner not publicly documented.
  • Jacques G. — COMEX issue #3153 (specialist registry attribution; primary documentation thin).

Service-replacement signals

Dial swaps from spider MK3 to MK4 / MK5 are the most common service modification. The MK3 spider defect was Rolex's responsibility and the company funded the replacements freely; many surviving 16660 cases carry later-supplier dials installed at service. The Piccinini reverse-side analysis is the canonical authentication tell. Other common service signals: matte-COMEX case (3001-3099) with glossy MK3 dial (= post-1984 service swap), and 93160 bracelet on early-serial case (= bracelet-only service replacement, head and bracelet date codes mismatched by several years).

Auction record — standard 16660

The standard non-COMEX 16660 market is dealer-dominated; auction-house anchors are rarer than COMEX equivalents.

  • Phillips Geneva XI, 10 May 2020, Lot 128 — see COMEX auction anchors above (the headliner result).
  • Sotheby's HK, Important Watches, 17 April 2021, Lot 2009 — Triple Six c.1984, serial 8'097'724. Estimate HKD 80,000-120,000.
  • Online auction platform, October 2023 — 1982 matte 16660, V8.5 condition grade. Hammer USD 14,135 against estimate USD 10,000-20,000. Useful as a 2023 standard-matte clearing comp.
  • Artcurial, Sale 1652 Lot 480, May 2009 — c.1984 standard. Hammer EUR 4,463. The pre-vintage-Rolex-boom benchmark; the 16660 was not yet a target market before c.2014.

The October 2023 online-auction result (USD 14,135) vs the May 2009 Artcurial result (EUR 4,463) spread tracks the broader vintage Rolex market lift across the decade — roughly 3-5x across the period for standard tool-watch references. The COMEX subset lifted further, from low-five-figure 2009 trades to the Phillips 2020 CHF 239,400 hammer.

No widely-cited "tropical" 16660 example surfaces in the auction record. The matte run is too short to commonly develop the full chocolate-brown patina that Submariner 5512 / 5513 examples show; the glossy MK4 / MK5 dials don't tropical the same way. A few examples surface as "pumpkin" (yellowed tritium lume) but no headline tropical-dial lot exists at auction-house tier.

Documented historical wearers — what is and is not documented

The 16660 is a working-divers' reference with thinner celebrity-provenance documentation than the predecessor 1665 or the successor 116660 era. Two persistent attributions need flagging:

  • Sylvester Stallone Sea-Dweller claim — celebrity-watch databases describe Stallone wearing a generic "Sea-Dweller 4000" — the 40mm 4000ft Sea-Dweller case that the 16660 and 16600 both wear. No surfaced photograph documents Stallone wearing a 16660 specifically. The most-cited Stallone collection essay covers his 1976 gold Submariner (Tiffany dial) and a green-dial Day-Date but makes no Sea-Dweller mention. Cliffhanger (1993) was four years after 16660 production ended; any "Sea-Dweller 4000" Stallone wore in 1993 photography is more plausibly a 16600. Treat the Stallone-16660 attribution as a circulating claim not verified for this reference specifically.
  • James Cameron Mariana Trench dive (26 March 2012) — Cameron's wrist piece on the DSV Deepsea Challenger was an experimental Rolex Sea-Dweller Deepsea Challenge (51mm prototype, the architectural ancestor of the 116660 → eventually the 126067 commemorative). Not a 16660. The 116660 D-Blue James Cameron commemorative followed in 2014. Cameron has no documented 16660 attribution.

The 16660 has no analog to the 1665's MilSub program — no documented military issue of the reference. The closest equivalent is the COMEX procurement chain, which is documented above. Private dive-company engravings exist (Subsea, Stena, Solus Ocean Systems, Comex Houlder, Oceaneering, others) but are ad-hoc field engravings on owner-funded purchases, not factory issue.

The cleanest documented professional-diving 16660 provenance chain is the Sotheby's Geneva 2026 Lot 92 Godart → Johansson chain detailed in the COMEX auction anchors. Two divers across 23 years, with the 1991 transfer at 450m North Sea saturation as a documented historical-event marker.

Tertiary-source corrections

  • "16660 used cal 3135 from 1988" — wrong. Every factory 16660 carries cal 3035. The 3135 launched in 1988 in the Datejust and Submariner 16610 but entered the Sea-Dweller line only with the reference change to the 16600 in 1989. Italian Watch Spotter's caliber timeline error.
  • "Wikipedia 16660 dimensions and movement" — Wikipedia's English Sea-Dweller article attributes 1989-2009 production, cal 3135, 15.5mm thickness, and ceramic bezel to the 16660. That's the 16600 spec set mislabelled (and the 16600 didn't have a ceramic bezel either — that's the 116600). Two-generation conflation.
  • "Matte = early, glossy = late" rule — broadly true but with documented exceptions. Late matte examples surface in the 8.0M-8.5M serial range (1983-early 1984), overlapping with early glossy production. First-batch matte COMEX cases (3001-3099) occasionally carry glossy MK3 dials — these are documented service replacements, not factory-original configurations.
  • "Spider crazing is UV damage" — incomplete. UV and thermal cycling accelerate the failure, but the underlying cause is Stern's lacquer chemistry — the dials were defective from delivery; environment merely exposed it. Rolex paid for service replacements freely, which itself confirms manufacturer-defect liability.
  • "Triple Six refers to Satanism" — tongue-in-cheek collector chatter, not the etymology. The nickname derives from the reference number's three sixes. Rolex's own period marketing called it the "Sea-Dweller 4000."
  • "All factory 16660s are SCOC chronometers" — partial. The dial says SUPERLATIVE CHRONOMETER OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED on glossy SCOC dials; first-batch matte COMEX (3001-3099) carries a two-line text omitting SCOC. Every 16660 is COSC-certified through the cal 3035 internally, but the dial print convention differs by batch.
  • "James Cameron wore a Sea-Dweller for the Mariana Trench dive" — partial. Cameron wore an experimental Deepsea Challenge (51mm prototype). Not a 16660; not even the production 116660 — the prototype that the 116660 evolved from. The 116660 D-Blue Cameron commemorative followed in 2014 as a tribute, not as the watch Cameron actually wore on the dive.
  • "50 vs 100 matte COMEX 16660s" — contested. Phillips says "fewer than 100." Some collector traditions read the 3001-3099 batch as up to 99 units; some sources count only 50 confirmed matte issuances. The 100-unit reading has the cleanest published support; the 50-unit reading appears in dealer summaries without primary documentation.

Print bibliography

  • Mondani, Guido + Mondani, Franca. Rolex Submariner & Sea-Dweller — A Reference Volume. Guido Mondani Editore (Genoa), multiple editions. Covers Submariner 5510 through 16610 plus Sea-Dweller 1665 / 16660 / 16600 / 116600. Mondani documents five marks of the 16660 in the most-cited specialist edition.
  • Goldberger, John + Negretti, Giampiero. 100 Superlative Rolex Watches. Damiani Editore, 2008. ISBN-13: 9788862080316. Selection heavily 1940s-1960s weighted; specific 16660 inclusion in the 100 watches not confirmed in this research pass.
  • Mazzariol, Stefano. Sea-Dweller: The Series Story. Mazzariol Editore. The Italian-language reference volume on the Sea-Dweller line; the Virginia Bozza article on the 16660 matte-dial marks at mazzariolstefanoblog.com is a chapter excerpt / companion piece.
  • Piccinini, Andrea. Sea-Dweller 16660 articles at andreapiccinini.com — the canonical English-language dial-mark and caseback typologies; not a print book but functions as the published reference work for the 16660 specifically.
  • Skeet, Martin + Urul, Mehmet (Nick). Vintage Rolex Sports Models. Schiffer Publishing. 4th edition 2014, ISBN-13: 9780764346330. Sea-Dweller coverage present but light on the 16660 specifically; the book is heavier on 1950s-1970s production.
  • Hodinkee, Reference Points: Understanding the Rolex Sea-Dweller (2018) — editorial reference document, not a print book; canonical English-language Sea-Dweller editorial reference.

Sources