Reference:6262

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Daytona -> 6262

The 6262 is the brief 1970–1972 transitional Daytona that pairs the older pump-pusher case of the 6239 with the new high-frequency caliber 727. It carries the engraved metal tachymetric bezel of its 6239 ancestor, runs in parallel with its acrylic-bezel sibling 6264, and was overtaken within two years by the screw-pusher (screw-down chronograph pushers) 6263 / 6265 pair that closed the manual-wind era. Production was small and the reference is one of the rarer manual-wind Daytonas in the secondary market.

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Rolex Cosmograph Daytona Ref. 6262 — pump-pusher metal-bezel transitional

Core facts

Field Value
Reference 6262
Family Daytona (Cosmograph, manual-wind)
Production 1970–1972
Movement caliber 727 (Valjoux 72 base), 21,600 vph
Case 36mm steel, 19mm lug width, pump pushers
Crystal acrylic
Bezel engraved steel tachymetric scale (vs acrylic insert on sibling 6264)
Crown Twinlock screw-down
Water resistance 50m / 165ft
Dial “Cosmograph” — standard panda / reverse panda; Paul Newman exotic
Bracelet 7205 rivet (early), 7835 folded (transitional), end-link 271
Sibling 6264 (acrylic bezel, pump pushers, same caliber 727)
Predecessor 6239 (caliber 722, metal bezel, pump pushers)
Successor 6263 / 6265 (screw-down pushers, longest manual-wind run)

Where it sits in the line

The four manual-wind Daytona references in production around 1970–1972 sort cleanly along two axes: pusher type and bezel material. The 6262 carries pump pushers and the engraved metal bezel, the same case configuration as the 6239 it succeeded. The 6264 carries pump pushers and an acrylic bezel insert, the same case configuration as the 6241. The 6263 and 6265, both introduced in 1970–1971 and running through 1988, return to the screw-down pushers first seen on the 6240 in 1965 and split bezel material the same way the 6262 / 6264 pair does. The 6262 is the metal-bezel half of a pump-pusher transitional pair, and the 6263 is its screw-pusher long-run counterpart.

What changed across the four-way 1970 generation was the movement, not the case. Caliber 727 raised the beat rate from 18,000 to 21,600 vph across all four references; the case decisions were inherited from the prior pair. Within two years the screw-pusher 6263 / 6265 had won out commercially, and the pump-pusher 6262 / 6264 pair was discontinued. The pump-pusher Cosmograph chronology that started with the 6239 in 1963 ends here.

Production outline

Production ran from 1970 through 1972, in parallel with the 6264 and overlapping the early 6263 and 6265 years. Total production is not pinned in any accepted Rolex source, and published date bands disagree at the edges. The 6262 is a short-run bridge reference from the last pump-pusher phase of the manual-wind Daytona line.

The reference sits in the pre-letter-serial era. Cases carry the older numeric-only serial format used by Rolex through 1986. There is no documented Mk1 / Mk2 split for the 6262, and the dial, bezel, and pusher configuration stayed stable across the run. The visible variation across surviving examples is dial-aging (tropical browning) and the optional Paul Newman exotic dial, neither of which marks a production progression.

Movement notes

Cal 727 Valjoux 72 base in the 6262
Cal 727 Valjoux 72 base in the 6262

The 6262 carries Rolex caliber 727 throughout. The 727 is the higher-frequency revision of the Valjoux 72 base: 21,600 vph (3 Hz) versus the 18,000 vph cal 722 used in the earlier 6239 and the cal 722-1 used in the late 6239 / 6241. Architecture is otherwise unchanged. Lateral-clutch chronograph coupling, column wheel, tri-compax sub-dial layout, 17 jewels, 48-hour reserve, manual wind. No quickset, no hack. The frequency jump from 18,000 to 21,600 vph at the 722 → 727 transition is the single most consequential Rolex change to the Valjoux 72 architecture across the whole manual-wind chapter, and the 6262 / 6264 pair is the first generation to wear it.

The same caliber 727 continues into the 6263 and 6265. For forensic checking against a 6262 case, the ROW import code on US-bound movements and the bridge-stamp style are the practical reference points.

Dial map

Serial / year / dial / lume / bracelet

Serial range Year Dial Lume Bracelet End links Notes
2.4M-2.6M (~1970) 1970 Cosmograph, Paul Newman exotic tritium 7205 (early), 7835 (transitional) 271 Introduction year. Bracelet transition era — early 1970 examples likely on 7205; later 1970 may have shifted to 7835.
2.6M-3.0M (~1971) 1971 Cosmograph, Paul Newman exotic tritium 7835 271 Mid-production. 7835 folded bracelet established as standard fitment per chrono-shop matrix.
3.0M-3.3M (~1972) 1972 Cosmograph, Paul Newman exotic, Sigma (transitional, late 1972) tritium 7835 271 Final year. Sigma dials begin appearing on Daytona refs from ~1972 per Wind Vintage and Bulang — late 6262 examples could carry the early Sigma marker. Reference superseded by 6263/6265.

The 6262 dial group is small. Standard production wore the “Rolex Cosmograph” three-line dial: the older two-line text block of the pre-Oyster 6239 era, without the “Oyster” line that the screw-pusher Oyster 6240 / 6263 / 6265 references carry. The “Daytona” wording appears above the 6 o’clock sub-dial register, the position it had migrated to by 1967 across the manual-wind line. Both panda (black dial, white sub-dials) and reverse panda (white dial, black sub-dials) configurations appear on standard examples.

A smaller share carried Paul Newman exotic dials. The 6262 is a genuine Paul Newman host, much rarer here than on the 6263 or 6265. Late Sigma dials and tropical ageing on period black dials both turn up across the run, but they are overlays on the panda / reverse panda / Paul Newman split rather than separate dial families.

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

The case is the 36mm steel Oyster of the period, with pump pushers, an acrylic crystal, and 50m water resistance. The engraved steel tachymetric bezel is the quickest physical identifier of the 6262.

The scale runs 60–400 units per hour, engraved into a steel bezel insert in the same style as the 6239 and continuing on the metal-bezel screw-pusher 6265. The 6264 carries an acrylic bezel insert in the same configuration as the 6241 and 6263. The metal-versus-acrylic split runs through the entire manual-wind era: the 6239 and 6265 wear engraved metal, the 6240 and 6263 wear acrylic, and the 6262 / 6264 pair carries the choice forward in pump-pusher form.

Bracelets, end links, and clasps

6262 on period-correct Oyster bracelet
6262 on period-correct Oyster bracelet

The 6262 sits across the 7205-to-7835 bracelet transition. Early watches can be on 7205, later ones on 7835, both with end-link 271. The often-repeated “771” reading is just an OCR error for 271.

Clasps date the bracelet, not the watch head. Pre-1976 clasps carry quarterly numeric stamps inside the clasp blade in roman quarter / two-digit year format (“II.71” reads second quarter 1971). The 6262’s three-year run sits entirely in this pre-letter-code era. Both 7205 and 7835 use the small-logo folding clasp generation that ran from 1958 to roughly 1976. For the date-code key and the bracelet generation table, see Reference:Bracelets.

The US-market alternative bracelet was a Connecticut-made hollow-rivet 19mm with unmarked end-pieces, lighter gauge than the Swiss 7205 and sold by US Rolex agents from 1959 to 1979. These are not Rolex-stamped and are a known collector lead but not original-equipment.

Special branches

Paul Newman 6262

The Paul Newman dial appears on the 6262 in much smaller numbers than on the 6263 or 6265. The dial itself is not unique to this reference, so the collector test is whether the exotic dial, the matching pump-pusher case, the cal 727 movement, and the period bracelet all line up as one delivered watch rather than a later marriage.

Tropical 6262

Tropical 6262 dials are production-period black dials that have aged to brown or chocolate under UV exposure. They exist but are scarcer than tropical 6263 / 6265 examples by virtue of the smaller population. Christie’s catalogued one such example, a 1970 6262 with tropical-register dial (lot 6446722, sold via Christie’s online channels). The browning comes from the same lacquer instability documented across the period; the black pigment in the dial lacquer was unstable to light and heat, and decades of wear drove the colour shift. Tropical examples carry a significant premium where the case, movement, and pushers all read period-correct.

Sigma transition

The 6262’s final-year production overlaps the start of the Sigma dial era on Daytona references. Sigma dials carry small σ symbols flanking the SWISS line at 6 o’clock, denoting white gold hour markers under the 1970s industry agreement on identifying precious-metal components. The published collector literature marks the start of Sigma on Daytona dials around 1972, which puts the late 6262 production batch in the early-Sigma window. Standard 6263 / 6265 Sigma production runs roughly 1972 through 1978, so a documented Sigma-marked 6262 is a transitional artefact that surfaces only sporadically.

Historical market and auction record

The 6262 sits on the scarcer side of the manual-wind Daytona market because the production run was short. Standard examples trade below the Paul Newman tier but above the broader 6239 field, and the big thematic Daytona auctions helped pull the whole category upward. Auction depth is thinner here than on the 6263 and 6265, so single-lot results matter more.

Sources