Reference:1016
Explorer -> 1016
The 1016 is the Explorer. It defined what the word means on a Rolex dial and ran for somewhere between 26 and 29 years depending on which start date is accepted, making it one of the longest continuous production runs for any single Rolex reference. In that time it crossed two dial eras (gilt and matte), two calibers (1560 and 1570), and the radium-to-tritium lume transition. Collectors classify its dials using a Type/Mark system: Types 0 through 6 for the gilt era, Marks 0 through 5 for the matte. That taxonomy is the organizing framework for this article.
Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 1016 |
| family | Explorer |
| production | approximately 1960-1989 (Hodinkee) or 1963-1989 (Monochrome) |
| case diameter | 36mm |
| water resistance | 100m |
| crystal | acrylic |
| movement | caliber 1560 (early), caliber 1570 (mid-1960s onward) |
| dial text | “SUPERLATIVE CHRONOMETER OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED” |
| date complication | none |
| gilt dial era | ~1960-1967, Types 0-6 |
| matte dial era | ~1967-1989, Marks 1-5 |
Where it sits in the line
The Explorer line descends from the watches Rolex associated with the 1953 Everest expedition. The 1016 is the third-generation Explorer reference, following the 6150/6350 and the 6610. It is the watch that stabilizes the Explorer identity: 3-6-9 dial, 36mm case, time-only, chronometer-rated, built for legibility in the field.
The 1016 replaced the 6610 sometime around 1960-1963 and was itself replaced by the 14270 in 1989. That replacement brought a sapphire crystal, a new case, and a new caliber. The 1016 was the last acrylic-crystal Explorer, and the last Explorer without crown guards. Both details separate it visually from every Explorer that followed.
Within its own production span, the 1016 did not have a companion reference the way the Submariner had the 5512/5513 split. There was just the one Explorer, in one case, with one dial layout. All the variation happened within that single reference, and there was a lot of it.
What the 1016 outlasted
To appreciate what 29 years of continuous production means, consider what the Submariner line went through in the same period. When the 1016 started production (~1960-1963), the Submariner was the 5512/5513. By the time the 1016 ended in 1989, the Submariner had already been through the 1680, the 16800, and was well into the 16610 era. The GMT-Master went from the 1675 to the 16750 to the 16710. The Daytona went from the 6239 to the 16520.
The 1016 sat still while the rest of the professional line iterated. Rolex kept making the same 36mm, acrylic-crystal, smooth-bezel Explorer for three decades because it kept selling and because the design did not need to change. The Explorer concept of legibility, hard wear, and restraint was stable enough to sustain a single reference through a stretch when Rolex was evolving everything else.
This also means the 1016 spans enormous changes in the watch market itself. When it launched, tool watches were tools. When it ended, vintage Rolex collecting was beginning to emerge as a serious pursuit. The 1016 is one of very few references that bridges the entire gap between those two worlds.
The 3-6-9 dial
The Explorer’s defining visual feature is the 3-6-9 dial: Arabic numerals at the quarter-hour positions with bar indices at the remaining hours. The layout predates the 1016, going back to the 6150 and 6350, but the 1016 is the reference that makes it permanent. Every Explorer that follows, from the 14270 through the current 124270, uses the same fundamental 3-6-9 configuration.
The 3-6-9 layout is a legibility decision. Large Arabic numerals at the quarters and a prominent 12 o’clock triangle give the wearer instant orientation in low-light or high-stress environments. The Explorer was positioned as a land-based field watch built for people working in challenging conditions, distinct from the Submariner’s diving role or the GMT-Master’s aviation brief. The 3-6-9 dial is the visual expression of that purpose.
On the 1016 specifically, the 3-6-9 numerals change character across the two dial eras. Gilt-era numerals have a warm, slightly raised quality, with the gold-toned indices catching light differently from the glossy black background. Matte-era numerals are flatter and more uniform, printed white against a non-reflective black. The gilt numerals have more visual personality; the matte numerals have more functional clarity. The transition between them, around 1967, is one of the defining fault lines in 1016 collecting.
Lume application on the 3-6-9 numerals is also a key identifier. Mark 1 “Fat Numeral” sub-variants are classified entirely by how the luminous paint sits on these numerals: puffy and raised, wide and flat, or thin and balanced. The numerals function as a classification tool as much as a design element.
Production outline
The start date question
The production start date is not settled. Hodinkee’s Reference Points series gives 1960; Monochrome’s Explorer history gives 1963. The gap changes how to read the earliest gilt dials. Are Type 0 and Type 1 dials launch production, or transitional overlap with the outgoing 6610?
The most likely explanation is that 1960 reflects the earliest known case serial evidence, with Type 0 dials retaining 6610-era OCC text marking a transitional period, while 1963 reflects the point at which the 1016 was clearly the current-production Explorer in Rolex’s catalogue. The Vintage Rolex Field Manual lists 1963 as the start year for both caliber 1560 and caliber 1570 entries, aligning with Monochrome. Neither date is confirmed by Rolex factory records, and both should be read as bookends rather than a single answer.
The end date
The end date is cleaner. Production runs to 1989 with L-series serial numbers, and the 14270 replaces it. Some late 1016 production overlaps with early 14270 availability, which is normal for Rolex reference transitions.
Three decades in broad strokes
Production reads as three overlapping phases.
The gilt era runs from roughly 1960 to 1967: glossy black dials with gilt (gold-toned) printing, caliber 1560 transitioning to 1570, radium lume giving way to tritium, and chapter ring dials evolving to open chapter. Six distinct dial types are documented, plus a Type 0 transitional. Most serious collector money concentrates here.
The early matte era covers roughly 1967 to 1981. Matte black dials with white printing, caliber 1570 throughout, tritium lume. Production includes the Mark 1 “Frog Foot” and its sub-variants, the disputed-then-confirmed Mark 2, and the beginning of the Mark 3 and Mark 4 runs. This is the core commercial output.
The late matte era runs from roughly 1981 to 1989. Still matte, still 1570, but the Mark 5 appears, the Mark 3 returns for a second production run, and the Mark 4 extends into the final L-series year. By this point the 1016 was an old design, 36mm with an acrylic crystal while Rolex was moving to sapphire, and it kept selling anyway.
Serial range orientation
Rolex vintage serial numbers are not a precise dating tool, but they provide approximate production-year guidance. The following approximate serial-to-year mapping covers the 1016’s production span:
| Serial range | Approximate year |
|---|---|
| ~600,000-700,000 | 1960-1961 |
| ~700,000-900,000 | 1962-1963 |
| ~900,000-1,100,000 | 1963-1964 |
| ~1,100,000-1,500,000 | 1965-1967 |
| ~1,500,000-2,600,000 | 1968-1972 |
| ~2,600,000-4,000,000 | 1972-1975 |
| ~4,000,000-6,000,000 | 1976-1979 |
| ~6,000,000-8,000,000 | 1980-1983 |
| ~8,000,000-9,500,000 | 1984-1987 |
| R serial | 1987-1988 |
| L serial | 1989 |
These ranges are approximate. They are based on collector observation of documented examples, not Rolex factory records. Individual watches may fall outside expected ranges. The serial number is stamped on the case between the lugs at 6 o’clock (accessible when the bracelet or strap is removed).
The 6610-to-1016 transition
The 1016 replaced the 6610. The transition was not a clean model-year changeover; vintage Rolex references overlap. The 6610 is documented through 1959 or later by some sources, and the earliest 1016 production (if the 1960 date is accepted) suggests a brief overlap period where both references were in the pipeline.
The 6610 used caliber 1030, an earlier automatic that the 1560/1570 progression replaced. The case moved from 50m to 100m water resistance. Dial text changed from OCC to SCOC, though Type 0 dials retain OCC and bridge the two references. The 3-6-9 layout and 36mm diameter carried over unchanged.
Anyone working through the very earliest 1016 production has to study the late 6610 alongside it. The Type 0 dial makes no sense without knowing what it is transitioning from.
The 1016-to-14270 transition
The 14270 replaced the 1016 in 1989 with significant changes: sapphire crystal replaced acrylic, crown guards were added to the case, caliber 3000 replaced caliber 1570, the case was slightly reshaped, and the dial was updated (no more matte-era printing).
The 14270 is a modern Explorer where the 1016 is vintage. Its arrival closes the acrylic-crystal, guardless-crown, vintage-movement Explorer era. Nothing before or after the 1016 looks exactly like it: the 6610 lacks the water resistance and SCOC text, the 14270 lacks the acrylic warmth and exposed crown.
Movement notes
Caliber 1560
The 1560 is the early movement. It runs at 18,000 vibrations per hour and uses Rolex’s microstella fine-adjustment system on the balance wheel. A solid, chronometer-grade automatic, it is the older of the two calibers in the 1016 and does not hack.
It appears in early-production 1016 watches and overlaps with the beginning of 1570 adoption in the mid-1960s. The exact transition point is not precisely documented; expect crossover examples near the boundary.
Caliber 1570
The 1570 replaced the 1560 from the mid-1960s and powered the 1016 for the rest of its life. It beats faster at 19,800 vph and is the more refined movement. The notable upgrade came around 1971-1972 when Rolex added a hacking feature: pulling the crown stops the balance wheel and allows time-setting to the second.
Pre-hacking 1570 examples exist in 1016 cases from the mid-1960s through approximately 1971. The hacking modification was not retroactive. Earlier 1570 movements do not hack unless they have been serviced with later parts, which is a modification rather than original specification.
The 1570 is shared across several Rolex references of the era. It is not unique to the Explorer, but it defines the 1016’s mechanical character for the majority of the production run.
Dial map
Dial taxonomy is the primary sorting mechanism for the 1016, and it runs deep. Andrew Hantel’s Explorer1016.com built the framework that collectors now use, working from systematic documentation of physical examples; Hodinkee’s Reference Points coverage draws on the same research.
Two caveats first. The Type/Mark system is collector nomenclature, not a Rolex factory designation, and Rolex never numbered their dials this way. The system emerged from forum collectors over many years and remains the best available classification, but it is an overlay on production reality rather than a direct transcript. Dial transitions are zones, not clean lines: a gilt Type 5 dial might appear in a case whose serial range overlaps with Type 4 or Type 6 production. Rolex used dial stock as available, and service replacements further blur the picture. Serial-to-type mapping is approximate.
Dial quick-reference table
The full Type/Mark system at a glance, before the detailed breakdowns below.
| Designation | Era | Period | Serial range | Key identifying feature | Chapter ring |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 0 | Gilt | ~1960 | 516xxx-596xxx | OCC text retained from 6610 | Yes |
| Type 1 | Gilt | 1960-1962 | 516xxx-596xxx | SCOC text, no exclamation/underline, “Swiss” | Yes |
| Type 2 | Gilt | 1962-1963 | 516xxx-915xxx | Underline below SCOC, “stringy” coronet | Yes |
| Type 3 | Gilt | 1962-1963 | 516xxx-105xxxx | Exclamation point below 6, tall cartoonish coronet | Yes |
| Type 4 | Gilt | 1963-1964 | 90xxxx-105xxxx | First open chapter, thicker lacquer | No |
| Type 5 | Gilt | 1964-1965 | — | 90-degree serifs on E, stylized text | No |
| Type 6 | Gilt | 1964-1967 | 10xxxxx-174xxxx | SLANTED serifs on E, tapering coronet pearls | No |
| Mark 0 | Matte | ~1967 | 15xxxxx-17xxxxx | Transitional: gilt-era cliches, matte finish | No |
| Mark 1 | Matte | 1967-1974 | 15xxxxx-35xxxxx | “Frog Foot” splayed coronet | No |
| Mark 2 | Matte | 1969 | 21xxxxx | Diagonal serifs on E, T<25 on top of hashes | No |
| Mark 3 | Matte | 1974-76, 1984-89 | 36-41xxxxx, 80xxxxx-L | Absence of other marks’ tells (dual era) | No |
| Mark 4 | Matte | 1975-1981, 1989 | 40-66xxxxx, L | “Gumby” elongated coronet | No |
| Mark 5 | Matte | 1981-1987 | 66xxxxx-9xxxxxx, R | E central bars positioned higher, PLO clustering | No |
Serial ranges are collector-observed approximations, not factory-confirmed. Mark production dates overlap significantly. The numbering does not reflect strict chronological order — Mark 3 is the last dial produced (L-series 1989), not Mark 5. Mark 0 is a recently identified transitional variant with only one confirmed example.
Gilt dial era (~1960-1967): Types 0 through 6
The gilt era produces the 1016’s most valuable and most variant-rich dials. “Gilt” means a glossy black dial with gold-toned printing, the text reading warm against deep black lacquer. The printing technique, luminous material, and subsidiary text markers all change across the gilt era, and those changes are what the Type system tracks.
Gilt dial construction
The construction explains why gilt dials age the way they do and why they are so difficult to replicate convincingly.
A gilt 1016 dial starts with a brass dial plate. Black glossy lacquer is applied over the entire surface. The gold-colored text and indices are the brass plate itself, visible through precision openings in the lacquer, rather than ink printed on top. This means the gilt text sits slightly below the dial surface rather than on top of it. A clear lacquer coat is applied over everything. Silver text (such as SCOC certification lines, when present) is printed on top of the clear coat. Luminous material is applied last.
This layered construction produces the characteristic gilt depth and warmth, and aging affects each layer differently. The black lacquer can develop micro-cracks, the clear coat can yellow, and the brass can oxidize, all contributing to the patina that makes original gilt dials so prized. Refinished or reprinted dials rarely capture all these aging layers convincingly, which is why experienced collectors can often spot a refinished gilt dial by its “too perfect” appearance.
Type 0 — The transitional dial
Serial range: approximately 516xxx-596xxx. The earliest documented 1016 dials. These retain OCC (“Officially Certified Chronometer”) text from the preceding 6610 reference rather than the SCOC (“Superlative Chronometer Officially Certified”) text that becomes standard. Very rare.
Despite carrying text from the 6610, the Type 0 is a 1016 dial: its dial feet differ from the 6610 and the two are not interchangeable. Rolex produced new dials with old text rather than fitting leftover 6610 dials into 1016 cases. The movement is caliber 1560 from the start, not the 1030 that powered the 6610. A new watch in transitional labeling.
Type 0 is the strongest evidence for the 1960 start date, since the dial clearly belongs to the 1016 case but carries text from the reference it replaced.
Aftermarket OCC dials exist. The rarity and value premium on genuine Type 0 dials makes them a target for reproduction. Confirming a Type 0 requires dial-feet verification, movement matching, and ideally provenance documentation.
Type 1 — The Fleming watch
Serial range: approximately 516xxx-596xxx, with some 901xxx underline dials (uncommon). Chapter ring present. No exclamation point. “Superlative Chronometer Officially Certified” text established. Radium lume. Signed “Swiss” at the bottom — no exclamation point, no underline. Short, simple crown design. The 901xxx dials typically lack exclamation marks. This is the first fully “1016-identity” gilt dial.
Ian Fleming’s personal 1016 was a Type 1 with a 1960 case. Bond-watch researcher Dell Deaton identifies it as the original James Bond watch on the page: Fleming wrote that Bond “wore a stainless steel Rolex Explorer 1016 and a Datejust.”
The Type 1 dial is clean and direct. The chapter ring, a circle of minute markers around the dial’s edge, gives it a slightly busier look than the later open-chapter types. Coronet and text proportions are characteristic of the early 1960s.
Type 2 — The underline dial
Serial range: approximately 516xxx-915xxx, with rare examples as late as 13xxxxx. Chapter ring present. The coronet is “stringy,” with a wide base extending outward; the shape is distinctive enough to drive identification. The defining feature is an underline below the SCOC text, indicating tritium luminous material. This is one of the radium-to-tritium transition markers, signalling that the factory has switched to tritium lume on this dial.
Within the 600-999xxx range, Type 2 dials appear with exclamation points, underlines, or both. The exclamation-plus-underline combination is unique to the Explorer; contemporary GMT-Master and Submariner dials from the same era do not combine both markers. The reason is not documented and may reflect a different dial supplier or a different internal standard for the Explorer line. Bottom text reads “Swiss” (radium era). A transitional example at approximately 1.3M serial with tritium “T<25” text has been documented but requires careful provenance verification.
Type 3 — The exclamation point dial
Serial range: approximately 516xxx-105xxxx. Chapter ring present. The coronet is “tall and cartoonish” with large pearls at the top, a more exaggerated shape than Types 1 or 2. The defining feature is an exclamation point (a small dot) below the 6 o’clock position, another radium-to-tritium transition indicator. Exclamation points appear in the 6-9xxxxx range. Bottom text reads “Swiss” (radium era). Exclamation points also appear on Submariner and GMT-Master dials from this era, so the marker is not Explorer-specific, though its appearance on the 1016 follows the same timeline.
Types 2 and 3 overlap in serial ranges. The relationship between the underline (Type 2) and the exclamation point (Type 3) as lume transition markers is not cleanly sequential. Both appear across the same broad serial range, and the exclamation-plus-underline combination on some Type 2 dials makes the story messier. Treat these as related but not strictly ordered transition markers.
Type 4 — The first open chapter dial
Serial range: approximately 90xxxx-105xxxx. The visual change is significant: the chapter ring disappears. The minutes track is no longer enclosed in a circle, opening up the dial and giving it a cleaner, less busy appearance. The lacquer is thicker and more mirror-like than on earlier types. Gilt hands. This is the dial that establishes the look most collectors picture when they think of a gilt 1016.
Two distinct subtypes exist within Type 4: early examples with “Swiss only” at the bottom (with underline), and later examples with “Swiss T<25” (the T<25 text positioned low on the minute hash marks). The underline-to-T<25 transition inside a single type shows how the lume changeover cut across the Type classification rather than aligning neatly with it.
Type 5 — The stylized text dial
Production: 1964-1965. Open chapter. The coronet has non-tapering “stringy” projections, and the “E” in Rolex has 90-degree serifs (straight, not diagonal). “Swiss T<25” replaces the top third of the bottom three minute hash marks at 6 o’clock. The distinguishing feature is text that reads as almost handwritten or stylized, a different typeface treatment from the clean printing of Types 1-4 and the later Type 6.
Type 5 sits in a narrow production window and can be difficult to separate from late Type 4 or early Type 6 examples without examining the serif angles on the “E”: 90-degree on Type 5 versus slanted on Type 6. That serif detail is the primary differentiator. Type 5 is the least discussed of the gilt types in collector circles, though Hantel covers it carefully.
Type 6 — The late gilt dial
Serial range: approximately 10xxxxx-174xxxx. Open chapter, no chapter ring. Identifying features: slanted (diagonal) serifs on the “E” in Rolex, the key identifier that separates Type 6 from Type 5’s 90-degree serifs; tapering projections with prominent pearls on the coronet; and “T<25” replacing the upper portion of the minutes hash marks at the 6 o’clock position. This is the last gilt dial type, bridging into the matte era.
The coronet on Type 6 dials has its own character. The diagonal serifs on the “E” extend into coronet proportions that tend to be wider and more settled than earlier types. By this point in gilt production both coronet shape and text style have stabilized into what feels like a mature design, which makes the impending shift to matte dials read as abrupt by comparison.
Type 6 is where tropical dials become part of the story. Exposure to light and heat over decades turned the black dial surface to brown, dark or light depending on the degree of exposure. Tropical 1016 dials are not a separate type; they are Type 6 (primarily) dials that have aged into a different color. Collectors prize the effect, and a well-aged tropical gilt 1016 carries a substantial premium over a standard black example.
Lume transitions across the gilt era
The 1016’s gilt era spans the industry-wide transition from radium to tritium luminous material, and the dial markers that track this change are central to the Type classification system.
Radium era, pre-1963 approximately. The earliest 1016 dials used radium-based luminous paint. Radium dials develop a warmer, more orange-toned patina over decades. These dials read “Swiss” at the bottom and carry no lume-transition markers.
Three markers appear on 1016 dials during the 1962–1963 radium-to-tritium switch: the tiny dot under 6, the exclamation point, and the underline. They help place the watch inside the transition, even though Rolex never explained them cleanly.
That some Type 2 dials carry both an exclamation point and an underline, a combination not seen on Submariner or GMT-Master dials from the same period, suggests the Explorer line may have had a slightly different dial-marking protocol or supplier during the transition.
Tritium era, 1963 onward. Once the transition is complete, the separate markers disappear. Dials read “T<25” (sometimes written “T < 25”) at the bottom, indicating tritium content below 25 millicuries. The “Swiss” text becomes “Swiss T<25” or “T Swiss T” depending on era and market. Tritium lume ages to a lighter cream or gold color compared to radium’s warmer orange patina.
The lume transition is a primary authentication tool. A dial with tritium lume indicators but a case serial from the radium era (or vice versa) is a red flag for a replaced or refinished dial.
The gilt-to-matte transition (~1967)
Around 1967, the 1016 transitions from glossy gilt dials to matte dials with white printing. The shift is not unique to the Explorer; the same change runs across the Submariner and GMT-Master lines in the same period. Matte dials are flatter, with bright white text against a less reflective black surface, and the warm gilt character disappears.
The transition is not a clean break. Late gilt and early matte examples overlap in serial ranges, and the earliest matte dials (Mark 1) retain some of the warmth of the gilt era in their lume application before the matte style fully settles in.
From this point on, the classification system switches from “Types” to “Marks,” a naming convention that reflects the collector community’s separate treatment of the two eras.
Matte dial era (~1967-1989): Marks 1 through 5
The matte era covers 22 years and the majority of total 1016 production. Dials are matte black with white printed text. Variant complexity is lower than in the gilt era (no lume transitions, no chapter ring evolution), but the Mark system still identifies five distinct dial versions based on coronet shape, text placement, and serif details.
Mark 0 — The transitional matte dial
Serial range: approximately 15xxxxx-17xxxxx (estimated). Recently identified and extremely rare, with only one confirmed example documented. The Mark 0 is a transitional dial between the gilt and matte eras. It uses printing cliches (text and coronet shapes) from Type 2 and Type 4 gilt dials on a matte rather than glossy finish. The coronet is “stringy” with a wide base (a gilt-era characteristic), and the lume has a distinctive thick “band-aid” texture.
Mark 0 represents the exact moment of transition: a matte-era manufacturing process applied to gilt-era design elements. Hantel documents it, but the single-example rarity makes it more curiosity than practical classification. Most collectors and dealers will never encounter one.
Mark 1 — “Frog Foot”
Serial range: approximately 15xxxxx-35xxxxx, with possible outliers at 44xxxxx and 51xxxxx. Production: approximately 1967-1974, though examples appear in cases dated as late as 1978 (likely NOS dial stock or service installations). The Mark 1 is the most immediately recognizable matte dial because of its coronet: the five spikes of the Rolex crown are widely splayed outward, resembling the webbed digits of a frog’s foot. The shape sticks once recognized.
The Mark 1 has three documented sub-variants based on lume application. Fat Numerals show puffy, raised luminous material on the hour markers, concentrated in the 15–17xxxxx serial range; the lume sits noticeably above the dial surface, oversized 3/6/9 lume plots are the visual signature, and early puffy-lume examples react strongly to UV light (zinc sulfide content), giving the numerals a three-dimensional quality. Mega Fat examples use a wider and flatter lume application than Fat Numerals: the luminous plots cover more surface area but do not rise as high. Normal sub-variants carry thinner lume with more balanced proportions and are the most common Mark 1 configuration. Flat handsets appear until approximately serial 17xxxxx, then transition to the later handset style.
Whether these sub-variants reflect deliberate production changes, different lume batches, or ordinary variation in the application process is not settled. They are consistent enough to be identified and tracked, but the “why” is uncertain.
Gary Leffew, the bull-riding champion, received a Mark 1 1016 as his prize at the 1969 Calgary Stampede, one of the better-documented period-correct wearings of a Mark 1.
Mark 2 — The disputed dial
Serial range: approximately 21xxxxx. Production: 1969 only. The Mark 2 has a complicated collecting history. It was once widely dismissed as a reprint or aftermarket dial, then confirmed as an original production piece. That reversal moved the Mark 2 from “avoid” to legitimate rarity in the collector hierarchy.
Identifying features: the coronet is more balanced and symmetrical than the Mark 1’s splayed frog foot; the “T<25” (Swiss T<25) text sits on top of the minute hash marks rather than below or between them, as on other marks; the “E” in Rolex has a distinctive outward diagonal slope on the top and bottom serifs, similar to the Type 6 gilt dial, which gives the Mark 2 a balanced font quality.
Fred Savage featured a Mark 2 on Hodinkee’s Talking Watches series, giving it mainstream collector visibility.
The narrow serial range and small production quantity make the Mark 2 scarce. The history of being doubted also means due diligence on Mark 2 identification tends to be more rigorous than for other marks; buyers and sellers both know the history.
Mark 3 — The mystery dial
The Mark 3 is identified primarily by what it is not: no frog foot coronet (Mark 1), no slanted E serifs (Mark 2), no elongated Gumby coronet (Mark 4), no raised E central bars (Mark 5). It is the default dial that remains once the other tells are eliminated.
Serial range: approximately 36xxxxx-41xxxxx (first batch) and 80xxxxx-R/L series (second batch). What makes the Mark 3 genuinely unusual is two distinct production eras. The first batch dates from approximately 1974 to 1976. The second batch dates from approximately 1984 to 1989. Between those windows, Mark 4 and Mark 5 production fills the gap.
The dual-era production is one of the 1016’s unresolved questions. Why Rolex did it is unknown; what matters in practice is that the same Mark 3 language appears in two different periods, so a buyer should be careful before calling every Mark 3 dial original to an early case.
Lume color helps date Mark 3 examples in practice: first-batch dials show yellowed patina, second-batch dials show cream or white lume. This is a rough guide rather than a diagnostic, since lume aging depends on storage conditions.
The Mark 3 is also the last dial seen in L-series (1989) cases, making it the final 1016 dial despite the Mark 5 being the last Mark number in the sequence. The numbering does not reflect chronological order.
Mark 4 — “Gumby”
Serial range: approximately 40xxxxx-66xxxxx, plus L-series (1989). Production: approximately 1975-1981, plus L-series. The defining feature is the coronet: exaggerated, elongated, tall and thin. Collectors call it the “Gumby” coronet for its stretched proportions, and it is immediately identifiable next to any other mark’s coronet.
Mark 4 is the dial on which Tiffany & Co. stamped examples appear. The most documented provenance comes from the Bunny Mellon estate, sold at Sotheby’s on November 21, 2014: a group of 8 watches, most selling under $20,000 at the time. Tiffany-stamped 1016 dials are rare and carry a premium that has grown substantially since that 2014 sale.
Mark 4’s presence in both the 4-6 million serial range and the L-series (1989) bookends the Mark 5’s production window. Combined with the Mark 3’s dual-era pattern, this creates a late-production dial timeline that is not strictly sequential. Marks 3, 4, and 5 overlap and interleave rather than following a clean progression.
Mark 5 — The high E
Serial range: approximately 66xxxxx-9xxxxxx plus early R series. Production: approximately 1981-1987. The identifying feature is the “E” letters in “Explorer”: the central horizontal bars sit higher, closer to the top bar, than on other marks. The letters P, L, and O in “Explorer” also cluster closely together. These are subtle tells that require comparing the text against known examples of other marks.
The Mark 5 is the last numbered mark in the collector system but it is not the last 1016 dial. Mark 3 second-batch dials appear in cases from 1984-1989, and Mark 4 dials appear in L-series cases from 1989. The Mark 5’s window ends before the reference itself does.
Mark 5 therefore occupies a specific production slot, roughly the early to mid-1980s, rather than representing the “final” 1016 dial. A very late 1016 (1987-1989) should be expected to carry either Mark 3 or Mark 4, not Mark 5.
Late-production dial complexity: the non-linear timeline
The interaction between Marks 3, 4, and 5 in late production is worth mapping explicitly, because the numbering is misleading:
| Approximate period | Dials in production |
|---|---|
| 1974-1976 | Mark 3 (first batch), Mark 4 begins |
| 1975-1981 | Mark 4 primary production |
| 1981-1987 | Mark 5 primary production, Mark 4 continues |
| 1984-1987 | Mark 5 continues, Mark 3 returns (second batch) |
| 1987-1989 | Mark 3 (second batch), Mark 4 (L-series) |
Three marks overlapping and interleaving across 15 years. This is not the behavior of a factory running one dial design at a time; it suggests multiple dial suppliers, strategic use of existing stock, or production runs driven by factors that are not documented. The chronological progression through the marks is not clean.
What a dial mark tells you (and what it does not)
A dial mark identifies the type of dial: the specific combination of coronet shape, text placement, serif details, and lume characteristics that collectors have classified. It does not directly indicate when the watch was produced. A Mark 1 dial on a 1978-serial case does not mean the watch was assembled in 1967-1974; it may mean NOS dial stock from earlier production was installed at the factory, or that a service dial from earlier stock was fitted during maintenance.
The mark is a dial identifier. The case serial is the date indicator. When the two do not align with expected production windows, the explanation is usually service history, NOS parts, or factory flexibility rather than a fraudulent dial. The mismatch is a signal to investigate further.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes
Case
The 1016 uses a 36mm Oyster case, the diameter that defines the Explorer line from the early 1950s through the 14270 and beyond. Water resistance is rated at 100 meters, double the 50m rating of the earlier 6610. There are no crown guards. The crown sits exposed on the case flank, which gives the 1016 a cleaner profile than contemporary Submariners and GMT-Masters but also makes the crown more vulnerable to damage.
The 1016 case is a simple, functional design that did not change significantly across the 29-year production run. Case finishing is polished rather than brushed on the sides, with brushed surfaces on the top of the lugs. The lug width is 20mm.
Bezel
The bezel is smooth and fixed; no Explorer has ever had a rotating bezel. The polished steel bezel frames the acrylic crystal and is one of the details that gives the 1016 its dressy-tool-watch character. Where the Submariner’s knurled rotating bezel is functional, the Explorer’s smooth bezel is purely aesthetic.
Crystal
Acrylic throughout the entire production run. The 1016 never received a sapphire crystal; that upgrade arrived with the 14270 replacement in 1989. The acrylic crystal is domed, which gives vintage 1016 watches a warmth and depth that flat sapphire crystals do not replicate. It also scratches easily and can be polished, which is both a maintenance advantage and an authenticity complication (heavily polished crystals can distort the dome profile).
The crystal is a Tropic or equivalent acrylic type. Replacement crystals are widely available, so the crystal itself is not a strong authenticity indicator, though the correct dome height and profile for the production era should be checked.
Crown
The 1016 uses the standard Rolex screw-down Twinlock crown appropriate to its production era. Early examples use a smaller crown; later production uses the slightly larger crown that became standard across the Oyster line. The crown is not protected by crown guards, which means crown damage and crown replacement are common on surviving examples.
Hands
The 1016’s handset evolved across its production span but kept the same basic architecture: Mercedes hour hand (the three-pointed-star design Rolex uses across its professional line), straight minute hand with a luminous rectangular section, and a thin seconds hand.
In the gilt era, hands are gilt-finished to match the dial text and carry luminous plots filled with the same radium or tritium material as the indices. As the lume ages, hands and dial should patinate together; matched patina between the two is one of the strongest indicators that both are original to the watch. Mismatched lume color between hands and dial is a common tell for replacement parts.
In the matte era, hands transition to white-lume plots on a polished or rhodium-finished base. They are visually brighter and more functional than the gilt-era equivalents, mirroring the design shift from warmth to clarity.
Hand replacement is one of the most common service interventions on vintage 1016 watches. Where dials are sometimes preserved during service, hands are routinely swapped for fresh luminous plots. Original-delivery hands on a 30+ year-old 1016 are genuinely scarce, and their presence is a meaningful factor in completeness and value.
Caseback
The 1016 caseback is a screw-down Oyster type, stamped with reference and serial information. The caseback interior carries the reference number (1016), and the serial number is between the lugs at 6 o’clock. On early examples, the caseback may also carry the model number and a Roman numeral date code indicating the quarter and year of case manufacture.
The caseback is not a strong visual identifier; it is generic to the Oyster case family. Its primary value is as a documentation surface, since the serial and reference numbers on the caseback are the starting point for dating and identifying any 1016.
Bracelets and clasps
Both Oyster and Jubilee bracelets were available throughout the 1016’s production run. Unlike the Submariner, which was Oyster-only, the Explorer offered a dressier Jubilee option.
Oyster bracelets
| Reference | Type | End links | Period | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7206 | Rivet | 58 | 1960-1972 | Swiss-made, non-expandable, 12 links total |
| 6636 | Rivet | 58 | 1960-1972 | Swiss-made with spring links |
| C&I | Rivet | unlabeled | 1960-1977 | American market, non-expandable, rivets have holes |
| 7836 | Folded-link | 280 | from 1967 | Into early 1980s |
| 78360 | Solid-link | 580 | from ~1975-1976 | Through end of production |
Jubilee bracelets
| Reference | Type | End links | Period | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6251 | Folded | 50 | 1950s-mid-1970s | Swiss-made |
| 62510H | Solid-link | 550 | from 1976 | “A” stamp minimum |
Additional bracelets from The Vintage Rolex Field Manual
Ref 203 (20mm, SS) is a riveted expansion bracelet, Explorer-specific. Ref 207 (20mm, SS) is shared across Explorer, Milgauss, and GMT-Master. Ref 7879/0 (20mm, SS) is an Oyster-style bracelet specific to the Explorer. Ref 7879/3 (20mm, SS and 18K yellow gold) is the two-tone Explorer bracelet. Ref 9325/0 (20mm, SS) carries a Fliplock clasp and is shared with the Submariner.
Bracelet identification notes
Reference numbers were stamped on the center link nearest to the end link from 1964 onward. Swiss end links sit more flush to the case; American-market versions are flatter and longer. A 2-3 year variance between bracelet date codes and case serial numbers is normal and does not indicate a replacement; Rolex did not synchronize bracelet and case production. The value of original-delivery bracelets, especially rivet bracelets on gilt-era watches, makes reproduction commercially attractive. Authentication requires examining rivet construction, end link fit, clasp stampings, and date codes in combination.
Fitment versus delivery
As with the Submariner, what survives on a watch today tells you about the watch’s service history as much as its original delivery specification. Bracelets were consumable items that Rolex dealers routinely replaced during service. A late solid-link bracelet on an early gilt 1016 is more likely a service replacement than evidence of an unusual factory delivery.
Special branches
Space-Dweller
Mechanically and physically the Space-Dweller is a 1016. Same case, same movement, same handset, same dimensions. The only difference is the dial text: “Space-Dweller” replaces “Explorer.” The dial is gilt.
The Space-Dweller was produced for the Japanese market, commemorating American astronauts. The Rolex trademark for “Space-Dweller” was filed in 1968 with a first-use date of 1967, yet case serial numbers on known examples span from 1963 to 1968. Whether the earlier cases were re-dialed or whether production started before the trademark was filed is unresolved.
In 2008, Sotheby’s auctioned four Space-Dweller dials as a single lot. Full-watch Space-Dweller examples surface rarely at auction and command strong premiums. The Space-Dweller is one of the most distinctive and collectible branches of the 1016 family tree.
“Space-Dweller” evokes the Space Race era of Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo. Rolex was not the brand associated with space travel (that was Omega, after the Speedmaster’s Apollo 11 mission), but the Space-Dweller suggests Rolex wanted to claim some of that territory in one market at least. The name did not survive long, and Rolex eventually consolidated the Japanese market under the Explorer name as elsewhere.
For collectors, the Space-Dweller is the grail branch of the 1016 family. A complete Space-Dweller with confirmed provenance and original components is one of the most sought-after vintage Rolex configurations outside the Paul Newman Daytona orbit.
Tiffany & Co. stamped dials
Tiffany-stamped 1016 dials exist on Mark 4 matte dials. The best-documented provenance comes from the Bunny Mellon estate, sold at Sotheby’s on November 21, 2014. The sale included 8 watches, most of which sold under $20,000.
The Tiffany stamp appears on the dial below the Rolex text, indicating the watch was retailed through Tiffany & Co. The dials were printed with the Tiffany name at Rolex’s factory or approved supplier for authorized Tiffany retail, not modified aftermarket. The same retailer-stamping practice runs across other Rolex references.
The number of surviving Tiffany-stamped 1016 examples is not documented; the population is small. Awareness of these watches increased substantially after 2014, and prices followed.
Tropical dials
Tropical dials are standard black dials (primarily gilt Type 6, though potentially any black-dialed 1016) that have changed color through decades of ultraviolet and heat exposure. The black surface turns brown. Range varies from very dark (barely distinguishable from black in low light) to a warm, light chocolate.
Tropical aging is uncontrollable and unpredictable. Two watches stored in different conditions will age differently, and no two tropical 1016 dials look exactly alike. That uniqueness is part of the collector appeal: each dial is an artifact of its specific time and environment.
Tropical 1016 dials command a premium over standard black examples when the color change is even and attractive. Uneven fading, spotting, or partial color change reduces or eliminates the premium.
Albino (white dial)
A white-dial variant of the 1016 exists, with a parallel white-dial variant on the preceding 6610. The Albino is among the rarest known 1016 configurations. Sourcing is thin: confirmed examples are few and detailed documentation is scarce. Treat the Albino as documented but not yet well-enough sourced to make strong claims about production quantity, period, or purpose.
Historical significance
The Everest lineage
The Explorer name traces to the 1953 British Everest expedition. Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay summited on May 29, 1953. Rolex capitalized on the achievement with advertising and eventually with the Explorer name on the dial. The 6150/6350 and 6610 preceded the 1016 in this lineage, but the 1016 is the reference that carried the Explorer name the longest and cemented it as a permanent part of the Rolex catalogue.
The 1016 itself was a general-purpose tool watch, not a mountaineering instrument, that happened to carry a name associated with the highest mountain on earth. The association gave the Explorer a narrative identity comparable to the Submariner in diving, the GMT-Master in aviation, and the Daytona in motorsport. The Explorer was the land watch, the field watch, the everything-else watch.
Ian Fleming and James Bond
The Fleming connection is the 1016’s most famous cultural footnote. Ian Fleming wore a gilt Type 1 Explorer 1016 (case production 1960). In his novels, Fleming wrote that Bond “wore a stainless steel Rolex Explorer 1016 and a Datejust,” making the 1016 the original literary James Bond watch.
The films diverged. When Dr. No was shot in 1962, Sean Connery wore a Submariner 6538 on a NATO strap. The Submariner became the cinematic Bond watch and the Explorer connection was largely forgotten by the general public. Fleming consulted on Dr. No, From Russia With Love (1963), and Goldfinger (1964); he knew the films had switched to a Submariner and apparently did not object. He died in 1964.
Dell Deaton’s research brought the Fleming/Explorer connection back into collector consciousness. For 1016 collectors it is a significant provenance point: one of the most widely read writers of the twentieth century chose this specific reference for himself and for his most famous character.
The Explorer as anti-Submariner
Among collectors, the 1016 occupies a specific cultural position as the anti-Submariner. Where the Submariner grew larger, gained crown guards, added dates, and became a status symbol, the Explorer stayed small, simple, and functional. The 1016 is the watch for collectors who find the Submariner too obvious.
This cultural position is relatively recent. For most of its production life, the 1016 was simply the Explorer — a solid, unglamorous field watch.
Production without total numbers
No total production number for the 1016 has been published in the collector literature. Nicholas Foulkes’s Rolex Submariner (2024) gives a 17,338-unit figure for the Submariner 5512; no equivalent figure exists for the 1016. Across 29 years of production the total is likely substantial, certainly in the tens of thousands, but without a factory-endorsed number any estimate is speculation.
The absence makes rarity claims difficult to anchor. The gilt era is shorter and earlier than the matte era and therefore scarcer. The Mark 2 has a very tight serial range. The Space-Dweller is extremely rare. None of these claims can be expressed as a percentage of total production the way Submariner collectors can express theirs.
Collecting considerations and authentication
The value hierarchy
The 1016 value hierarchy is steep and very collector-specific. Space-Dweller and early gilt sit at the top, then the stronger later gilt types, then the scarcer matte sub-branches, then the standard commercial matte run. Condition, provenance, originality of components, and lume color all shift individual examples within or across those tiers.
Dial authentication
The 1016’s 29-year production span means the reference has had decades of service history, and many examples have received replacement dials during Rolex service. A service dial is factory-correct, not fake, but may not be the original dial for the case’s serial range. For gilt-era watches, the difference between an original dial and a service replacement can be tens of thousands of dollars.
Several authentication checkpoints matter, but the logic is simple: dial, hands, lume, and bottom text all have to agree with the case period. A 1016 with one dramatic “good” part and the wrong rest of the watch is still the wrong watch.
Market context
The 1016 market has stratified dramatically over the past decade. Matte-era examples from the 1980s, once affordable entry points into vintage Rolex, have climbed well above the prices that contemporary steel sport models sold for at retail. Gilt-era examples, especially early types with original dials, have moved into serious five-figure and occasionally six-figure territory.
The Bunny Mellon sale at Sotheby’s in November 2014 is an instructive snapshot: Tiffany-stamped 1016 examples sold mostly under $20,000. That price point would be unrecognizable today for the same watches. The market for retailer-stamped and special-variant 1016 examples has moved substantially.
Space-Dweller examples, when they surface, command prices that reflect their extreme rarity and the crossover appeal between Explorer collectors and Japanese-market Rolex specialists. Full-watch Space-Dwellers at auction are events that draw attention beyond the usual Explorer collecting community.
The tropical dial premium is condition-dependent. An evenly faded chocolate-brown tropical gilt 1016 carries a premium that can double or triple the price of an equivalent standard black example. Partial or uneven fading reduces or eliminates the premium. The tropical market is aesthetic-driven; collectors are paying for beauty rather than rarity, since any black dial could theoretically have turned tropical under the right conditions.
Unusually for a Rolex reference, the 1016 taxonomy has a single primary architect. Most vintage Rolex classification systems emerged collectively from forum culture — the 5512/5513 dial taxonomy was built by many hands. Hantel’s framework gives the 1016 system more coherence at the cost of reflecting one researcher’s priorities more than most.
Sources
Editorial
- A Comprehensive Collector's Guide to the Rolex Explorer I — Jon Bues (Hodinkee, 2018)
- The History of the Rolex Explorer — Frank Geelen (Monochrome, 2024)
- #TBT Rolex Explorer 1016 — The Last of the Breed — Bert Buijsrogge (Fratello)
- Rolex Explorer 1016 Went Caving — Antony C. Huntington (Fratello)
- Submariner 5512 vs Explorer 1016 — Sunday Morning Showdown (Fratello)
- Ian Fleming's Rolex Explorer Ticking During Its Exhibit (Fratello)
- Exploring the Rolex Explorer — Wei Koh (Revolution)
- Dossier: Rolex Explorer — Wei Koh (Revolution)
- A Look in the Mirror — Admiring the Gilt / Gloss Dial — Logan Baker (Phillips)
- The Evolution of Rolex Luminous — Philipp Stahl (Rolex Passion Report)
- Space Junk: The Reality of the Infamous Rolex Space-Dweller — Jose Pereztroika (Perezcope, 2023)
Specialist registries
- Explorer 1016 Dial Catalogue (Andrew Hantel — explorer1016.com)
- Explorer 1016 Movement Reference (explorer1016.com)
- Explorer 1016 Hands Reference (explorer1016.com)
- Explorer 1016 Bracelet Reference (explorer1016.com)
- Mk1 'Frog Foot' 1016 (Hairspring)
- Mark 3 Dial 1016 (Hairspring)
- Gilt Dial 1016 (Hairspring)
- Tropical 1016 (Hairspring)
- Mark 2 Matte Dial 1016 Unpolished (Wind Vintage)
- Underline Chapter Ring 1016 (Wind Vintage)
- Mark 4 1016 Unpolished (Wind Vintage)
Auction lots
- 1962 Albino white-dial 1016 — Phillips Geneva XVII lot 19 (Phillips, 2023)
- 1016 Explorer — Phillips Winning Icons NY lot 46 (Phillips, 2017)
- 1016 Explorer — Phillips Geneva III lot 181 (Phillips, 2016)
- 1016 Explorer — Phillips Hong Kong NINE lot 904 (Phillips, 2019)
- 1016 Explorer — Phillips Geneva EIGHT lot 23 (Phillips, 2018)
- Bundeswehr-issued 1016 c.1976 — Antiquorum NY lot 204-98 (Antiquorum, 2008)
- Légion Étrangère-issued 1016 — Antiquorum Geneva lot 310-346 (Antiquorum, 2017)
- 1016 black gilt chapter ring — Antiquorum Forte dei Marmi lot 340-117 (Antiquorum)
- 1016 tropical gilt — Antiquorum Hong Kong lot 373-131 (Antiquorum, 2024)
- 1016 on Jubilee — Antiquorum Forte dei Marmi lot 352-87 (Antiquorum)
- 1016 sold 26 June 1965, early gloss gilt cal. 1560, riveted Oyster — Bonhams 25399 lot 7 (Bonhams)
- Mark 3 matte 1016 c.1975 — Bonhams 31170 lot 1062 (Bonhams)
- Mark 3 1016 c.1975 case 4,085,359 — Bonhams 31161 lot 1004 (Bonhams)
- 1016 c.1984 late R-series — Bonhams 30798 lot 52 (Bonhams)
- 1016 c.1960 early gilt, serial 596xxx — Bonhams 21920 lot 84 (Bonhams)
- Explorer Ref. 1016 c.1960 tropical, cal. 1560 — Sotheby's Important Watches Part II (Sotheby's, 2022)
- Tiffany & Co. retailed 1016 c.1976 — Christie's Dubai Edit lot 80 (Christie's)
- 1016 c.1962 with COSC certificate dated 25 May 1962, case 744,939 — Christie's NY Edit lot 248 (Christie's)
- 1016 c.1970 — Christie's La Dolce Vita lot 132 (Christie's)
Books
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White (Morning Tundra). ISBN 978-0-578-63082-3
- The Best of Time: Rolex Wristwatches — An Unauthorized History — James M. Dowling and Jeffrey P. Hess (Schiffer Publishing, 3rd edition). ISBN 978-0-7643-2437-6
- Oyster Perpetual Submariner: The Watch That Unlocked the Deep — Nicholas Foulkes (Wallpaper / ACC Art Books, 2024) — cross-references for 1016 1959-1967 production period