Reference:116520

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Daytona -> 116520

The 116520 is the first Daytona built around a wholly in-house Rolex chronograph movement. It launched at Baselworld 2000 with caliber 4130, ran for sixteen years, and gave way to the ceramic-bezel 116500LN in 2016. The architecture that defines every modern Daytona, vertical clutch and column wheel and 72-hour reserve, reached the wrist here first.

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Rolex Cosmograph Daytona Ref. 116520

Core facts

detail value
reference 116520
family Daytona (Cosmograph)
production 2000–2016 (sixteen years)
case 40mm steel (true measured ~38.5mm per Fratello)
crystal flat sapphire, no Cyclops
bezel engraved steel tachymetre, fixed
crown Triplock screw-down, 700 (twin-O-ring)
movement caliber 4130, COSC, in-house
frequency 28,800 vph (4 Hz)
power reserve 72 hours
jewels 44
water resistance 100m / 330ft
bracelet 78490 Oyster, SEL
end links 503B early; SEL integral from launch (78490)
clasp Oysterlock with Easylink 5mm comfort extension (~2002–3 onward)
serial format R-series (1999–2000) through random alphanumeric (2010 onward)
predecessor 16520 (Zenith caliber 4030)
successor 116500LN (Cerachrom, 2016)
siblings 116523 Rolesor, 116528 yellow gold

Where it sits in the line

The 116520 succeeds the 16520, the eleven-year Zenith-driven Daytona that ran from 1988 through 1999–2000. The case profile carried over almost unchanged: 40mm Oyster shell, screw-down pushers, engraved steel tachymetre bezel. The change was inside. Cal 4030 left in 2000, cal 4130 took its slot, and Rolex finally owned the whole watch.

The same generation runs in precious metal as the 116523 Rolesor, 116528 yellow gold, 116519 white gold, and 116518 yellow gold on a leather strap, all carrying cal 4130 and covered separately. The 116520 is the steel-bracelet workhorse of the family.

The 2016 116500LN arrived with a Cerachrom bezel and a refined cal 4130, but the underlying architecture is the one the 116520 introduced. The 116520 is the last steel-bezel Daytona Rolex ever made.

Production outline

Production runs from 2000 to 2016, sixteen continuous years on a single reference number. Within that span a handful of small revisions mark out internal generations.

Serials follow the catalogue-wide cutover. Pre-2010 examples carry the conventional letter prefix; from mid-2010 onward the number is a random eight-character alphanumeric string with no public year mapping. See Reference:Serial-numbers for the full key.

Lume changed mid-life. Early production carried Luminova; Super-LumiNova replaced it within the first few years, and the lume reads cooler and brighter on later examples than on the earliest ones. Published sources do not converge on the precise cutover window. The 116520 sits entirely on the post-tritium side of the 1998–2000 catalogue-wide cutover, so every example is a non-radioactive watch.

The APH (Applied Printed Hour) error dial enters the run around 2009 on white-dial production and 2010 on black, per Logan Baker's coverage at Phillips. The misprint sits in the dial text, with visible spacing between "Cosmogr" and "aph" in the second line, and was never officially corrected. APH dials kept turning up sporadically through the 2016 discontinuation. Production volume is not documented; the variant's frequency within the run remains an open question.

Late-production examples carry chromalight-era lume that reads slightly differently from earlier Super-LumiNova, while the dial print stays consistent across the transition.

Movement notes

Caliber 4130 is the headline of this reference. Rolex's first wholly in-house chronograph movement, launched in 2000 after a development cycle the brand described as five years long. For thirty-eight years prior, the chronograph base came from outside: the Valjoux 72 family powered every manual-wind Daytona from 1963 through 1988, then the Zenith El Primero base sat under cal 4030 from 1988 through 1999. The 4130 ended that.

The architecture matters. Cal 4130 uses a vertical-clutch chronograph coupling: two stacked discs engage along their flat faces in place of the rocking pinion of a horizontal clutch. The result is no jitter at start, no amplitude loss when the chronograph runs, and no backlash hop on the seconds hand. Paul Boutros, writing in the third part of Hodinkee's Daytona dissection, confirmed the absence of jitter across a seven-day wear test with frequent chronograph use. A column wheel handles the start-stop-reset switching, the older and visually cleaner alternative to a cam-actuated system.

The 72-hour reserve is the practical payoff of cal 4130, the upgrade an owner actually feels. It is also why the 116520 became the first Daytona that could come off the wrist on Friday and run through Monday morning.

For the full caliber lineage see Reference:Movements#cal-4130.

Dial map

Serial / year / dial / lume / bracelet

Year Dial Lume Bracelet End links Notes
2000-2003 Black, White (silver subs) luminova 78490 SEL Initial in-house production with engraved Rolex inner bezel ring.
2003-2008 Black, White super-luminova 78490 SEL Lume transition. Easylink 5mm comfort extension introduced ~2002 per Hodinkee context (precise launch year per ref undocumented in published sources).
2009-2014 APH error (white 2009-), APH error (black 2010-) chromalight 78490 SEL APH kerning anomaly per Phillips Logan Baker.
2014-2016 Standard black, Standard white chromalight 78490 SEL Final production; APH still occasionally appears.

Dial branches are fewer here than on the 16520, but the ones that exist matter.

variant years distinguishing features notes
Black dial, cream lume ~2000–2005 Black dial; lume plots and indices in cream-yellow Luminova Earliest in-house Daytona dial. Cream-to-white lume cutover year is contested; sources do not converge on a specific year
White "Panda" dial 2000–2016 White dial with black sub-dial rings; silver chronograph hands Standard alternative to black across the entire run; carries through every lume generation
Black dial, white lume ~2005–2016 Black dial; lume plots in cooler white Super-LumiNova then chromalight The mid-life and late-life standard black dial
Racing / luminous-numerals dial late production Arabic numerals on the sub-dials with luminous fill; available in black and white Late-run variant; documentation on production span and volume is thin
APH error dial 2009 (white) / 2010 (black) onward Visible kerning gap between "Cosmogr" and "aph" in the dial text Documented by Logan Baker at Phillips as a kerning anomaly produced by an Asia-Pacific Hong Kong dial batch; appears sporadically through 2016. Carries a small market premium today despite being a misprint

Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

 
Fratello's caliper-measured asymmetric lug — 38.5mm true case width

The case is steel, marketed as 40mm, with an engraved tachymetre bezel and a flat sapphire crystal. Ben Hodges, writing for Fratello in 2021, ran a caliper across the steel case and recorded 38.5mm, attributing the gap to Rolex's case-machining tolerances. Gold and platinum Daytonas of the same generation measure closer to the marketed figure; the gap is specific to the steel case. The marketed 40mm is the nameplate, the 38.5mm is what calipers find.

The lugs are slightly asymmetric on the steel case. The right-hand lugs run thinner and meet the case sooner than the left to clear the screw-down pushers, geometry that Fratello frames as the opposite of a Speedmaster Professional's asymmetry. Gold and platinum 116520-generation cases run symmetric. The asymmetry is a steel-only quirk.

The bezel is engraved steel, with no aluminum insert and no ceramic. Cerachrom did not reach the Daytona until the 2016 116500LN, so every 116520 wears a steel bezel through its entire run. The crystal is flat sapphire with no Cyclops, and the running-seconds sub-dial sits at six o'clock. Rolex's 700-series Triplock crown (twin O-ring screw-down) carries the 100m water rating. Boutros notes the consequence: the pushers must be unscrewed before the chronograph can be started, the price Rolex paid for the case's depth rating.

Bracelets, end links, and clasps

The bracelet reference is 78490, the steel SEL Oyster bracelet that ran the full 2000–2016 production span.

Aggregator listings sometimes mislabel the 116520 bracelet as a 78690, which is the Explorer code. The Daytona bracelet is 78490.

End links arrive on the 116520 already as SEL: solid end links integral to the first link rather than a separable stamped piece. The earlier 503 and 503B references belonged to the 78360 and 78390 bracelets on the 16520, where the end link was a separate stamped fitting. The 78490 carries the end link as part of the bracelet structure, which is why the 116520 sits flat against the lugs in a way the earliest 16520s do not.

Early 116520s shipped without Easylink and later ones added it, with the comfort extension reaching the line around 2002 to 2003. The date code on the clasp dates the bracelet, not the watch head.

The Daytona never adopted the Glidelock micro-extension that arrived on the Submariner-line clasps in 2010. Easylink is the only on-bracelet adjustment the 116520 ever offered.

Special branches

The APH (Applied Printed Hour) error dial is the headline anomaly of the reference. Baker at Phillips frames it as an Asia-Pacific Hong Kong dial-printing error that slipped past quality control on a portion of 2009-and-later production and was never officially corrected. The market treats the misprint as a desirability feature, and APH examples trade at a small premium over standard dials. A 2018 Sotheby's lot of a white APH 116520 with chromalight blue lume sits as the publicly visible auction record for the variant.

Double-signed Tiffany & Co. dials on the 116520 turn up in the catalogues of the major auction houses. The pattern is part of the broader Tiffany-signed Rolex tradition; the earlier 16520 generation produced more documented examples.

The Rolex 24 at Daytona trophy connection belongs to the modern Daytona line overall rather than the 116520 specifically. Documented presentation-watch examples sit mainly on the gold and Rolesor side of the family.

Historical market and auction record

Retail sat around USD 11,400 in 2014 per Fratello's owner-perspective figure for a UK-bought example. Authorised-dealer waits were already long before discontinuation; Fratello records a two-year UK wait between 2012 and 2014. WatchTime in 2016 noted used 116520 prices in steel approaching USD 12,000, close to retail at the moment the 116500LN was announced.

The 2016 ceramic-bezel transition reset the market. With the 116500LN absorbing Daytona demand at retail and the 116520 instantly the last steel-bezel Daytona, used prices climbed in the years that followed. Auction treatment has stayed selective rather than headline-driven. The steel 116520 trades regularly at Sotheby's, Christie's, and Phillips, with APH variants and original-papers examples drawing the strongest bids.

Sources