Reference:16550
Explorer II -> 16550
The 16550 is the short-run transitional Explorer II. It replaces the 1655, introduces sapphire crystal and caliber 3085 with true independent-hour GMT function, and sets the basic black/white dial split that defines later Explorer II collecting. The cream-dial paint-defect watches are the branch most collectors mean when they talk about the reference.
Four years is short by Rolex standards. The short run is one reason the 16550 has its own market; the cream-dial branch is what fixes the reference in collector memory.
Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 16550 |
| family | Explorer II |
| production | 1985 to approximately 1988 or 1989 |
| movement | caliber 3085 (28,800 vph, independent-hour GMT, first on Explorer II) |
| case | 40mm steel Oyster, sapphire crystal, fixed engraved 24-hour bezel |
| water resistance | 100m |
| dial | matte black or white Polar; a subset of white dials aged to cream |
| bracelet | 78360 Oyster with 501B hollow end links; very late production on 93150 |
| predecessor | 1655 |
| successor | 16570 |
Where it sits in the line
The 16550 takes the Explorer II out of its first era and sets the template the line carried for the next thirty years. The 1655 that came before used an acrylic crystal, caliber 1575 with a linked 24-hour hand that advanced together with the hour hand, and a case and bezel design that belonged to the early 1970s. The 16550 replaces all of that: sapphire crystal, caliber 3085 with a truly independent local-hour hand for second-time-zone use, and a redesigned 40mm case that sheds the thicker mid-1970s proportions.
The caliber 3085 is the single biggest change. On the 1655, setting the watch advanced both the hour hand and the 24-hour hand together; the 24-hour function was a day-night indicator and nothing more. On the 16550 the local hour hand moves independently of the 24-hour hand. Arrive in a new time zone, jump the hour hand forward or back in one-hour steps, and the 24-hour hand stays on home time. That makes the 16550 the first Explorer II that works as a GMT in the conventional sense, sharing caliber 3085 with the contemporary GMT-Master II 16760.
The 16570 replaces the 16550 almost directly and keeps most of its visual DNA. What changes are the movement generation, the Polar dial surround treatment, and the lume era. The 16550 is the brief bridge between the 1655 and the long 16570 run.
Production outline
The run is short and the exact edges are fuzzy. Most sources treat 1985–1989 as the practical production window, with the handover to the 16570 happening around late 1988 or early 1989.
Surviving 16550 examples typically fall in the R, L, E, X, and 8.4M–9.7M serial ranges, with dealer-catalogue consensus placing the cream-dial peak in the 8.4M–8.5M band and continuing examples documented into 9.6M. The earliest cream-dial examples show up on B-series serials from 1985; later examples into 1987 and 1988 show the same issue. That four-year window for the paint defect covers most of the reference's production rather than a narrow early band.
No formal Mark dial taxonomy has converged across editorial sources for the 16550 the way it did for the 1016 or the 1655. Late-production examples received the dial and hand design Rolex would carry forward to the 16570, which creates the central authenticity trap on the reference. A cream dial with black hour-marker surrounds is a late-transitional configuration on the 16550 and is also exactly what a later service-replaced dial looks like. The combination is not wrong on its own; it has to be read against the watch's paperwork and serial range.
Movement notes
Caliber 3085 defines the 16550. It is the same independent-hour GMT movement Rolex introduced in the 16760, and it turns the Explorer II into a true GMT rather than the fixed 24-hour cave watch the 1655 had been. Published jewel-count and power-reserve figures do not line up cleanly across sources; the collector point is the independent-hour function, not the spec disagreement.
The independent-hour function is the mechanical headline. On the 3085 and its 3185 successor, setting local time pulls the hour hand through an intermediate gear that does not engage the 24-hour hand train. The 24-hour hand holds on whatever reference time was last set on it; the hour hand jumps forward or back in one-hour increments for zone changes. In practice the wearer pulls the crown to the intermediate position on landing, jumps the hour hand to local time, and leaves the 24-hour hand on home.
The 3085 was replaced by the caliber 3185 in 1988. The 3185 is the same architecture with minor revisions and is the movement that powered the 16570 for most of its run.
Dial map
Black dial
The black dial 16550 is the base configuration. Matte black, applied white-gold indices with tritium lume plots, white-gold baton hands, a red 24-hour hand, quickset date at three. The dial printing carries the standard Explorer II layout: EXPLORER II at 12, OFFICIALLY CERTIFIED / CHRONOMETER above six, depth and water-resistance text at the bottom, and T SWISS T tritium notation across most production.
A small share of early-to-mid-production black dials show a spider-crack pattern in the lacquer: fine hairline fractures radiating across the dial surface, picked up most easily under raking light. The pattern is a manufacturing defect in the early dial lacquer that Rolex did not catch at production. Collectors accept spider-cracked black dials as period-correct, and an aggressively cracked example is sometimes called a "super spider" and read as patina rather than damage.
Polar (white) dial
The Polar dial 16550 is the first white-dial Explorer II. The practical tell is the white-gold-surround look, not the later black-surround style of the 16570. A white dial with black surrounds on a 16550 should be checked carefully.
Cream and rail dial
The most-discussed variant on the 16550. A subset of Polar white dials aged to a distinctive cream or ivory tone, called panna in Italian collector usage and peach on the most orange-shifted examples. The cream colour is not a factory-specified finish. The collector consensus traces it to a defect in the early white dial paint composition: the affected batch was more photosensitive than the corrected formula and oxidised unevenly over time, producing the cream shift. Rolex revised the paint mid-run, though no precise cutover date is documented.
The rail dial sub-category within the cream family refers to the vertical alignment of the C in CHRONOMETER with the C in CERTIFIED, the same typographic feature collectors track on the 1655 Mark 3 Rail Dial. On the 16550, rail and non-rail variants both exist, and the rail dial carries a premium at auction. A cream-toned rail dial is the top configuration on the reference and the example that anchors cream-dial pricing.
Cream dials with black hour-marker surrounds are either late-transitional production or later service replacements; the configuration alone does not separate the two. The standard authentication checks are dial-surround colour, lume-plot consistency, printing alignment, and paperwork. A papered cream-dial 16550 with white-gold surrounds and consistent lume is the configuration most collectors point to as the benchmark.
Disputed nipple-dial prototype
Antiquorum has catalogued three 16550 watches with nipple-style applied indices: raised conical indices with lume plots at the tips, of the kind used on the gold-case nipple dials of other 1970s–1980s Rolex sport references. The auction catalogue entries label them as prototypes, but the status is disputed by forum consensus and Rolex documentation has never surfaced to support it. Surviving examples have sold at Antiquorum across 2020 to 2022. The nipple-dial 16550 reads as a disputed sub-variant rather than a settled one.
Case, bezel, crystal, crown
Case
40mm steel Oyster, brushed top surface, polished case flanks, with the redesigned lug shape that the 16570 inherits. Lug-to-lug runs about 47mm. Case thickness sits around 12.5mm, somewhat thicker than the 16570 because the 3085 movement is 6.3mm deep. The 16550 inherits the "Fat Lady" thickness from its 16760 movement sibling, though the 40mm case diameter holds across the Explorer II line until the 216570 jumps to 42mm in 2011.
Drilled lug holes are standard throughout the 16550 production. The no-holes case treatment that arrives on the 16710 in 2003 never reaches the 16550 because production ended well before that transition.
Bezel
Fixed engraved 24-hour steel bezel, machined as part of the case top and filled with black paint. Same construction as the 1655 and continuing through all subsequent Explorer II references up to the 226570. The 16550 bezel is thinner than the 1655's but thicker than the 16570's.
Crystal
Sapphire, flat. The 16550 is the first Explorer II reference with sapphire crystal, replacing the acrylic that the 1655 carried. Cyclops magnifier over the date window at three.
Crown
Twinlock screw-down with crown guards, consistent with the 100m water resistance. Standard Explorer II crown architecture.
Bracelets, end links, clasps
The 16550 runs primarily on bracelet reference 78360, the twenty-millimetre Oyster that Rolex used across the sport lines through the mid-to-late 1980s. Hollow-stamped end links coded 501B are standard. Very late-production 16550 examples have been documented with bracelet 93150, which carries an updated clasp architecture that Rolex rolled out ahead of the 16570 launch. A papered 16550 on 93150 is a transitional example rather than a swap, though bracelet swaps on the reference are common enough that any 93150 on a 16550 without paperwork should be scrutinized.
Clasp codes across the run carry standard Rolex clasp-date stamps. A clasp dates the bracelet, not the watch head: a 1986-case 16550 with a 1988 clasp stamp is not wrong, it simply indicates a later bracelet on the watch, which happens routinely as bracelets are swapped during service.
Market and collector context
Pricing tracks the dial. Black-dial 16550 examples in honest condition with original parts sit in the $10,000–12,000 range as of the mid-2020s. Polar white dials carry a premium over the black, trading closer to $15,000–20,000 depending on condition and papers. Cream and rail-dial examples sit at the top of the market: clean cream rail dials with boxes and papers have hammered above $20,000 at auction, and the $21,250 Wright Auctions result from October 2022 sits in the middle of that tier rather than the ceiling.
Collector interest in the 16550 has grown through the 2020s alongside the wider vintage-modern Rolex market. The reference has a real scarcity story: four years of production against the 16570's twenty-one. Volume figures are not publicly documented, so the scarcity argument rests on the production window rather than confirmed numbers. The cream dial is the variant that anchors the 16550 in the collector lexicon. Without it the 16550 reads as a short transitional reference between the 1655 and the 16570; with it the reference has its own identity and its own market curve.
Spider-cracked black dials sit in their own collector category. Some buyers seek them out as period patina; others avoid them as damage. The market has not converged on one reading, and pricing reflects that split.
Sources
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
- "In-Depth: The History of the Rolex Explorer II, The Ultimate Adventure Watch", Monochrome
- Tony Traina, "Spelunking Into the Details: The Rolex Explorer II Reference 16550", European Watch Co., 2020-08-30
- "A Brief Guide to the Rolex Explorer II Polar", Analog:Shift
- Alessandro Metelli, "Rolex Explorer II 16550 vs 16570", Italian Watch Spotter, 2020-02-05
- "Collector Guide: The Rolex Explorer II — All References in Detail", Beyond The Dial
- "You Asked Us What Rolex Would You Buy", Fratello
- "The Deep Dark Details of the Rolex Explorer II", Craft + Tailored
- Shane Griffin, "Under the Loupe: Rolex Explorer II 16550", Wound for Life, 2015-04-22
- "The Explorer Saga Complete Story of the Rolex Explorer II", Perpetual Passion, 2021-04-07
- "Rolex Caliber 3085 Complete Guide", Millenary Watches
- "Caliber 3085 Reference Entry", Grail-Watch
- "Explorer II 16550 Cream Rail Dial circa 1987", Sotheby's, 2020-01-01
- "Rail Dial Explorer II 16550 circa 1988", Sotheby's, 2020-01-01
- "Reference 16550 Explorer II Automatic", Sotheby's, 2024-01-01
- "Ref 16550 Black Prototype Nipple Dial", Antiquorum, 2020-01-01
- "Ivory Rail Dial 16550 B431181 circa 1985", Antiquorum
- "Cream Rail Dial 16550 October 2022 Lot 106", Wright Auctions, 2022-10-01
- "Ref 16550 Unpolished circa 1987", Wind Vintage
- "16550 Cream Rail Dial listing", Menta Watches
- "16550 Cream Rail Porcelain and Galaxy Tropical Listings", Bulang & Sons
- "16550 Black Spider Rail and Cream Rail Listings", HQ Milton
- "1984 Cream Peach 16550", Craft + Tailored
- "Vintage Rolex 16550 Explorer II", Bob's Watches
- "Official Explorer II 16550 Cream Dial Owner Thread", RolexForums
- "16550 cream dial first generation bezel", Vintage Rolex Forum
- "Cream Dial Explorer Serial Range", Vintage Rolex Forum
- "A Curiosity: Rolex Explorer II 16550 Prototype", WatchProSite