Submariner -> 16618

The 16618 is the full 18k yellow-gold Submariner Date of the cal. 3135 era. It runs in parallel with the two-tone 16613 and changes gradually rather than through one major break.

The 16618 sits in the middle of the gold Submariner lineage that begins with the first gold Submariner in 1969 and continues to the present: 1680/8 (1969) → 1680816618 → 126618. It is the second-longest chapter in that line, and it covers the gold Submariner at its most mature technically — Microstella regulation, solid end links, sapphire crystal — while still wearing an aluminum bezel insert that ties it to the pre-ceramic era.

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Rolex Submariner 16618 — 18k yellow gold with blue dial and bezel

Core facts

detail value
reference 16618 (LN = black, LB = blue)
family Submariner Date
production about 1988 to 2008–2009 (~20 years)
movement caliber 3135 (date, quick-set, 28800 bph)
case 40mm, full 18k yellow gold
crystal sapphire with Cyclops
water resistance 300m
bezel 18k gold with aluminum insert (blue or black)
lume tritium (early), Luminova (~1998), Super-Luminova (late)
bracelet 93158 → 93258 (SEL transition, see bracelet section)
rehaut plain (early), engraved ROLEX ROLEX (~2005 onward)
successor 116618

Where it sits in the gold Submariner lineage

The gold Submariner is the longest continuous precious-metal thread in the family, and the 16618 is its long modern middle chapter.

Within its own generation, the 16618 is the full-material expression. Same movement logic as the 16610 and 16613, but in the richest and heaviest case of the group.

Movement notes

Caliber 3135 runs throughout, the same movement used in the steel 16610 and the two-tone 16613. Quick-set date, 28,800 vph, Microstella regulation for fine-tuning. The 3135 is one of the most produced and best-documented calibers in the Rolex catalog, with a reputation for long service intervals and durability.

Case material has no effect on movement specification. A 16618 and a 16610 from the same year are mechanically identical inside — what differs is the metal around the movement.

Production outline

The 16618 tracks the 16613 in its internal evolution, reference for reference, but in full gold. Dial lume moves from tritium through Luminova around 1998 to Super-Luminova in the late years. The bracelet moves from the 93158 with hollow end links to the 93258 with solid end links around 2000. The inner rehaut stays plain through the first two thirds of production and picks up the engraved ROLEX ROLEX text with the serial at the 6 o'clock position from around 2005.

Early production (~1988–1998)

Early watches carry tritium lume (marked T SWISS T or T<25) on the 93158 bracelet with hollow end links. The plain rehaut and hollow-link bracelet date these examples firmly to the pre-millennium era. Early tritium 16618 examples are the most historically specific configuration within the reference and, for collectors, the most sought after on the 20-year span.

Mid production (~1998–2005)

Dial lume transitioned from tritium to Luminova and then to Super-Luminova. The bracelet moved to the 93258 with solid end links around 2000. Exact changeover dates have not been pinned to serial bands in the current evidence.

Late production (~2005–2009)

The late watches carry the engraved inner rehaut, with ROLEX ROLEX repeating around the ring and the serial at 6 o'clock. In finish and detail these late examples sit closer to the 116618 that replaced them than to the tritium 16618s that opened the run.

Dial map

 
Champagne Serti dial with diamond hour markers and sapphire indices

Blue dial (LB)

Blue sunburst dial with gold applied markers and gold hands. The more commonly photographed and traded configuration, and the one that carries the lineage's visual identity. Lume transitions from tritium through Luminova to Super-Luminova across the run, on the same schedule as the 16613.

Rolex Forum collectors have documented a tropical purple phenomenon on blue 16618 dials. After decades of UV exposure and chemical aging, the pigment oxidizes to a purple or plum hue, with forum examples drawn from 1989 and 1991 production. Even, attractive color shift is treated as a desirable feature rather than a defect. The tropical shift is better documented on the 16613 because production volumes were higher, but it occurs identically on the 16618.

Black dial (LN)

Black dial with gold applied markers. Less common in the secondary market and typically trades at a discount to the blue.

Lapis lazuli dial

A lapis lazuli stone-dial variant of the 16618 is documented on Rolex Forum. A polished slab of lapis lazuli — a deep-blue semi-precious stone with characteristic gold pyrite flecking — replaces the standard painted dial. These are factory Rolex stone dials rather than aftermarket conversions. They are rare and carry substantial premiums. Authentication is exacting; genuine Rolex stone dials have specific finishing and marker-setting characteristics that separate them from the aftermarket stone-dial market that grew up alongside them.

Tiffany & Co. co-signed dials

Rolex Forum documents 16618 dials co-signed "Tiffany & Co." below the coronet and fitted with sapphire and diamond hour markers. These are period retailer-signed dials from the era when Tiffany & Co. was an authorized Rolex dealer and co-signed dials came out of that arrangement for select references. Tiffany-signed 16618 examples are rare and command significant premiums driven by the dual-brand provenance. Authentication of the co-signature matters: aftermarket Tiffany-stamped dials exist, and the premium gap between genuine and fake is large.

 
Blue dial detail — gold hands and hour markers against sunburst blue

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

The entire case is 18k yellow gold — body, bezel, crown, crown tube, and case back — with crown guards present and a Triplock crown sealing to 300m. The watch is substantially heavier on the wrist than the steel 16610 of the same generation.

The crystal is sapphire with Cyclops. The bezel insert is aluminum in blue or black, which fades and scratches with use. That is a condition factor, and also the patina pathway that makes older gold Submariners look worn-in rather than new. The ceramic insert only arrived with the 116618 that followed.

Early production carries what Rolex Forum collectors call a Flat 3 bezel — a vintage-style font on the insert in which the numeral 3 at the 15-minute position uses a flatter, more angular form. The Flat 3 is an early-production identification point, carried over from the outgoing 16808 generation. Later 16618 bezels moved to the more rounded numerals that became standard across the family.

The inner rehaut is plain on early and mid-production watches. Late examples carry the engraved ROLEX ROLEX text.

Hallmarks follow the standard Rolex precious-metal marking of the period. Helvetia bust with "G" Geneva assay mark through the mid-1990s, then the St. Bernard dog Barry mark from 1995 onward.

Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes

 
18k yellow gold Oyster bracelet and Fliplock clasp
 
Clasp detail with Rolex coronet engraving

Along with lume type, the bracelet is one of the primary authenticity and dating checkpoints on a 16618, running on the same transition schedule as the two-tone 16613.

Early bracelet: 93158 (end link construction disputed)

The early bracelet is a full 18k gold Oyster with Fliplock clasp, and it is prone to stretching over time. Gold is softer than steel, and daily wear on a heavy gold case will eventually open play between the links. Stretch is common on well-worn examples and a known condition factor at market. The 93158 covers early production through about 2000.

Accounts of 93158 end-link construction still disagree. The practical point is that both hollow-end-link and solid-from-start readings are live, so a buyer should not overstate certainty until the hardware is checked more systematically.

Later bracelet: 93258 (solid end links, SEL)

The 93258 brought solid end links — Super End Links — to the full-gold Submariner bracelet. Solid end links close the gap between bracelet and case more tightly than hollow construction, and they remove the flex that hollow-link bracelets tend to develop with age. The transition landed around 2000, mirroring the pattern of the steel and two-tone references. Rolex had first used solid end links on the Sea-Dweller before spreading them across the Submariner family.

The 93158-to-93258 transition is a key authenticity checkpoint. A post-2000 serial 16618 should be on a 93258. A 93158 on a late-serial watch usually points to a bracelet swap or a mismatched example.

Clasp date codes follow the standard Rolex scheme of the period. An S stamp indicates a service replacement. The code dates the bracelet, not the watch head.

Special branches

No documented military or institutional special branches exist for the 16618. Given the twenty-year run, factory Serti or gem-set variants beyond the lapis lazuli and Tiffany-signed dials covered above may exist but have not been systematically catalogued in the published literature.

No-holes case (D-serial onward)

Rolex Forum documentation places the no-holes case on the 16618 at around the D serial (roughly 2005–2006), following the same timing as the steel 16610 and two-tone 16613. Earlier examples have drilled lug holes; D-serial and later examples do not. The change is a consistent dating and authenticity checkpoint across the 3135-era Submariner generation.

Historical market and auction record

The 16618 appears at auction less often than the two-tone 16613 but more often than the shorter-run 16808. Full-gold construction puts it at the top of the 3135-era Submariner range by weight and by material value.

Blue LB is the more commonly traded configuration; black LN trades at a discount. Within both dials, the early tritium examples on hollow-link bracelets draw the most attention from collectors who prize the historical specificity of the opening years.

Modern pricing benchmark

The current-generation 126618LB retails at $48,600 USD at Rolex authorized dealers — 41mm case, caliber 3235, ceramic bezel. That figure is the relevant benchmark for placing the 16618 on the gold-Submariner value continuum. The aluminum-insert 16618 trades at a significant discount to its modern successor, reflecting the older movement, the aluminum bezel, and the smaller case, but the retail price on the 126618LB frames the category the 16618 sits directly beneath.

Sources