Reference:6536
Submariner → 6536
The 6536 and 6536/1 are the last small-crown, no-crown-guard Submariners. They share a case generation, a production era, and caliber 1030. The /1 suffix is a sub-variant marker within the same reference, and the caseback engraving is the only definitive way to tell which example is which. The pair closes out the unguarded small-crown Submariner before the 5512 brought crown guards and a new case architecture in 1959. The 6536/1 is considered substantially rarer than the 5508 that follows it, and honest, unpolished survivors are genuinely difficult to find.
Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 6536 |
| family | Submariner |
| production | approximately 1955/1956 to 1958 |
| case | 37mm, small 6mm crown, no crown guards |
| movement | caliber 1030 (butterfly rotor automatic) |
| depth rating | 100m / 330ft — the last Submariner with 100m rating |
| date | none |
| crystal | acrylic (domed) |
| hands | Mercedes-type, gilt finish |
| lume | radium |
| bezel | bidirectional, 60-minute, black anodized aluminum |
| significance | last small-crown no-crown-guard Submariner |
The /1 suffix system
Rolex used numeric suffixes (/1, /2 and so on) to flag a configuration change within an existing reference — significant enough to track separately, but not so far from the parent to merit a new reference number. The 6536 and 6536/1 are both members of the same reference family, on the same case, in the same production period.
The documented distinction concerns crown and dial configuration. Collector sources associate the 6536 with a two-line text dial and the 6536/1 with a one-line configuration, with terminology varying across sources. The caseback settles it: the 6536/1 caseback is engraved 6536/1 in full, while a caseback reading only 6536 belongs to the parent reference. Dial configuration is a working hypothesis; the caseback is the proof.
Where it sits in the line
The 6536 family is the small-crown side of the last no-crown-guard generation. On the small-crown line, the 6205 comes first in the mid-1950s; the 6536 and 6536/1 follow from 1956 to 1958 as the refined small-crown no-guard watches on caliber 1030; the 5508 picks up in 1958 with the newer caliber 1530; and the 5512 closes the chapter in 1959 with crown guards.
On the big-crown side, the 6538 is the "Bond Sub" (so called because Sean Connery wore one in Dr. No in 1962), rated to 200m and also without crown guards. The 5510 takes over the big-crown role in 1957–1958 as the first big-crown on caliber 1530. Both the small-crown and big-crown lines converge on the 5512 in 1959.
Production outline
Collector sources place the 6536 family in a 1956 to 1958 production band, with both the 6536 and 6536/1 running concurrently in that window — after the 6205 era and before the crown-guard transition. Runs were short throughout this period: the Submariner specification was still moving, and Rolex was updating cases, calibers, and bezels as professional-diving demands and internal caliber development accelerated.
Production for the parent 6536 is commonly quoted at roughly 100 units, which would make it one of the lowest-production Submariner references. Primary documentation for that figure is thin in the published sources, so treat it as a working estimate. Either way, survival is genuinely scarce: short production plus heavy professional use (these were working dive watches) means unpolished, well-documented examples are unusual in the market.
Movement notes
The 6536 family runs on caliber 1030 throughout — a full-rotor automatic with a butterfly-shaped rotor. It is a meaningful advance on the bumper automatics of the earliest Submariners (where the rotor oscillated between springs rather than rotating in a full circle), and the same movement appears on late 6205 production and the 6538.
Both chronometer-certified (COSC) and non-certified versions exist within the family on the same base caliber. The split is a certification distinction, not a mechanical one: some examples were sent for chronometer certification and some were not, despite sharing the same movement.
Sotheby's 2018 Lot 252 provides the strongest documentation for caliber 1030 on the 6536/1 — the caseback is stamped 6536/1 with III.57 — and a comparative study of three 6536/1 examples dated 1957 through 1959 confirms caliber 1030 across the entire production run.
Dial map
RolexHaven documents seven distinct dial and case variants within the 6536 family: the 6536/8 Double Reference, the 6536-1 Red Depth, the 6536-1 Gold Depth, the 6536-1 OCC, the 6536-1 Tropical, the 6536-1 No Hash Red, and the 6536-1 Silver Depth. Several of these map onto the bezel and depth-text distinctions described below.
The 6536 is the first Submariner reference where every production example carries Mercedes hands; the 6205 introduced them but only across its second series. Hands are gilt (gold-plated). Some early examples — the 6536/8 transitional and earliest 6536/1 production — carry a "long neck" hour hand, where the section between the Mercedes-logo aperture and the base of the hand is noticeably extended.
The seconds hand evolved during production. Early examples carry a large white lollipop seconds hand typical of the earliest Submariners; later production shifted to a gilt finish with progressively smaller lume plots at the tip.
Depth rating text
Depth-rating text is one of the clearest dating tools on a 6536 dial. Early examples print "100/300" in red; these are the earliest and most sought-after configurations. Later dials display "100m = 330ft" in gold or silver. The shift from red to gilt or silver depth text tracks across the production run and is consistent with Rolex's broader move away from red printing in this period.
Dial finish evolution
A comparative study of three 6536/1 examples documents the dial finish shifting from a matte quality in early 1957 production to an increasingly glossy finish by 1959, with late examples reading as fully glossy gilt. Lume colour shifted in parallel: whitish-beige in early examples, orange in the middle of the run, and back to beige in late production.
Bezel variants
The bezel evolved across the production window. Early 1957 examples carry a silver triangle at the zero marker and no hash marks for the first fifteen minutes — the cleanest and earliest layout. Mid-production examples from 1957 to 1958 keep the no-hash layout but switch to a red triangle at the zero marker, a shift confirmed on a dated 1958 example. Late 1959 production carries the red triangle alongside individual minute hash marks for the first fifteen minutes, the closest ancestor to the bezel that would define the 5512.
Invert dial variant
Rolex Forum collectors have documented an "invert" dial variant on the 6536/1, where the dial text is inverted from the standard layout. Documented examples are extremely scarce and the configuration is treated as a rare sub-variant.
The 6536/8 transitional variant
A transitional variant is catalogued as 6536/8 (also 6536/6538), where both reference numbers appear on the caseback with one crossed out in favour of the other. It predates the formal 6536 production run and uses a slightly larger, thicker case matching 6538 dimensions, while retaining the 6mm small crown and 100m depth rating of the standard 6536 family. Long-neck hour hands are documented on this transitional reference.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown
The case runs approximately 37mm (37.5mm on the 6536/8 transitional) with a 6mm crown — the 6mm crown being the visual tell against the 6538's oversized 8mm Brevet. The case belongs to the same generation as the 6538, built around the same tooling philosophy, but sized for the smaller crown tube and without the crown guards that arrive with the 5512. The crystal is domed acrylic throughout. The bezel is bidirectional, 60-minute, black anodised aluminium; the mechanism is looser than the precise-click unidirectional bezels that come in later generations.
Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes
The 6536 family was delivered on rivet bracelets. The strongest direct evidence is on the 6536/1 side: the Sotheby's 2018 Lot 252 watch carried a rivet bracelet, and a second archive example documents an original Rolex stretch rivet bracelet dated to 1957. Both are period-consistent for the family.
Rivet bracelets of this era are a collecting category in their own right. An original, undisturbed rivet bracelet on a 6536 adds substantially to completeness, and original bracelet survival is not guaranteed — these were replaced by dealers and owners across decades of service.
The last small-crown generation before crown guards
The 6536 family closes the no-crown-guard chapter on the small-crown side; the 6538 closes it on the big-crown side. From the 5512 forward, every Submariner carries some form of crown protection, and the unprotected tool-watch aesthetic that collectors associate with the earliest Submariners gives way to a more refined, guarded case. For collectors who value that earlier, open architecture, the 6536 and 6536/1 are its final clear expression on the small-crown side — the same case generation as the earliest hard-use Submariners, but with the caliber 1030 movement refinements that carry forward into the late 1950s.
The 6536/1 vs 5508 — how they compare
The clearest published side-by-side comparison pits the 6536/1 against its successor, the 5508. Both are small-crown, no-crown-guard Submariners rated to 100m — the last Submariners to share that specification. Case height is identical at 12.8mm and end-to-end length identical at 38mm. The 5508 caseback is slightly smaller in diameter.
The movement is the main distinction. The 6536/1 runs caliber 1030; the 5508 runs the newer caliber 1530, treated as more modern and more reliable. Both use butterfly rotors. Both dials are gilt chapter-ring with Mercedes hands, but the 6536/1 reads more golden in tone while the 5508 is more silver-toned.
The bezel is the cleanest dating tell. The 6536/1 carries the earlier layout with red triangle and ten-minute interval markers; the 5508 has the later individual hash marks across only the first fifteen minutes.
Historical market and auction record
The world record for any small-crown Submariner was set by a 6536/1 at Sotheby's, December 2018, Lot 252: USD 225,000 against a USD 20,000 low estimate, an eleven-times result. The watch was a first-series 1957 example (case number 306 9xx), unpolished, with the no-hashmark red-triangle bezel, glossy gilt dial, and original white circle seconds hand. Condition and originality drove the price. Small-crown Submariners had previously traded in the USD 100,000 to 150,000 range.
That same lot remains the benchmark for caseback-confirmed caliber 1030 documentation, stamped 6536/1 III.57. A second documented example adds an unpolished watch with the no-hash bezel and an original Rolex stretch rivet bracelet dated to 1957. A 1958 example with red-triangle insert gives a third reference point at a lower price level.
Bonhams sold a 6536/1 in December 2012 for GBP 21,000. That figure is a useful pre-boom marker for how far the small-crown market has moved.
The parent 6536 tracks the same market positioning. Short-run, pre-crown-guard, small-crown, same production period — collectors pursuing either are pursuing the same underlying watch in slightly different configurations.
Sources
- RolexHaven.com variant pages: 6536/8 Double Ref. / 6536-1 Red Depth / 6536-1 Gold Depth / 6536-1 OCC 1957 / and more
- Vintage Rolex Reference 6536 — Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
- History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 1, The Early References — Tom Mulraney, Monochrome
- Submariner Ref 6536/1, A Stainless Steel Automatic Wristwatch With Bracelet, Circa 1957 — Sotheby's, Sotheby's
- Rolex Small Crown Submariner Reference 6536-1 Unpolished — Eric Wind, Wind Vintage
- 1958 Rolex 6536-1 Small Crown Submariner — Grey and Patina, Grey and Patina