Reference:116508
The 116508 is the full yellow gold cal 4130 Daytona on a yellow gold Oyster bracelet, with an engraved 18k yellow gold tachymetre bezel — the 2016 successor to the 116528 and the second-to-last engraved-gold-bezel yellow gold Daytona Rolex produced before the line moved to Cerachrom. Same 40mm case profile as the rest of the cal 4130 family, same vertical-clutch column-wheel chronograph, same 72-hour power reserve, executed in 18k yellow gold from end-link to bezel. The difference from the 116528 is a refreshed dial programme — Rolex used the 116508 launch to introduce the green sundust dial that John Mayer would single out three years later in his 2019 Hodinkee Talking Watches appearance, and the meteorite dial that joined the catalogue in 2021.
The 116508 sits in the editorial scope on the same basis as the 116500LN: it is the gold-bracelet half of the cal 4130 generation, discontinued at the cal 4131 successor's launch, and now closed. Production ran from 2016 to 2023, when the 126508 took its place with the Cerachrom monobloc bezel that the steel 116500LN had carried since 2016 and the precious-metal references had picked up gradually in the years that followed.
Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 116508 |
| family | Daytona (Cosmograph, automatic) |
| production | 2016 to 2023 |
| case | 40mm, 18k yellow gold |
| crystal | sapphire (flat) |
| bezel | engraved 18k yellow gold tachymetre |
| crown | Triplock, screw-down, gold |
| water resistance | 100m / 330ft |
| movement | Rolex cal 4130 |
| frequency | 28,800 vph |
| jewels | 44 |
| power reserve | 72 hours |
| chronometer | COSC certified (Superlative Chronometer) |
| bracelet | 18k yellow gold Oyster, SEL, Oysterlock with Easylink |
| siblings | 116518 (yellow gold leather, 2000–2015), 116518LN (Cerachrom Oysterflex, 2017+), 116505 (Everose Oyster), 116515LN (Everose Cerachrom Oysterflex), 116509 (white gold Oyster), 116519LN (white gold Cerachrom Oysterflex) |
| predecessor | 116528 (yellow gold Oyster, engraved gold bezel, 2000–2016) |
| successor | 126508 (cal 4131, Cerachrom bezel, 2023+) |
Where it sits in the line
The 116508 replaces the 116528 in the yellow-gold-on-yellow-gold-Oyster slot of the cal 4130 generation. The change between the two is narrow on paper: same 40mm case, same engraved gold bezel, same cal 4130 movement, same Oyster bracelet architecture. What Rolex used the reference change for was a dial-programme refresh and a series of small specification updates — Chromalight lume across the run, an updated dial-printing programme that opened the door to the green sundust and meteorite layouts, and the Superlative Chronometer regulation specification on later examples. The watch reads as a continuation of the 116528 with a refreshed dial catalogue rather than a redesigned reference.
The 116508 sits inside a cal 4130 family that ran in parallel through 2016 to 2023: the steel 116500LN with Cerachrom from 2016, the engraved-bezel 116503 Rolesor that ran through 2017, the engraved-bezel 116508 in yellow gold and 116505 in Everose through 2023, and the Cerachrom-bezel precious-metal references (116515LN Everose, 116519LN white gold) on Oysterflex from 2017 onward. Rolex deliberately kept engraved-gold and Cerachrom in the catalogue alongside one another across the generation, with the strap and bezel choices working as configuration options rather than as successive eras. The 116508 is the engraved-gold yellow gold Oyster choice in that lineup.
The 2023 transition to the cal 4131 generation reset the catalogue. The 126508 took the 116508 slot with a Cerachrom bezel, a thinner case, and a reworked Oysterlock clasp. The 116508 became the last engraved-gold-bezel yellow gold Oyster Daytona Rolex produced — and, with the parallel discontinuation of the 116500LN, the last engraved-or-aluminum-bezel Daytona of any configuration to leave the factory.
Production outline
Production runs from 2016 to 2023. Pre-2010 serial mappings do not apply — the 116508 sits entirely inside the random alphanumeric serial era, with no public year-mapping for case serials. Rolex's standard case-stamping practice continued through the run: the random eight-character alphanumeric serial appears on the rehaut between the lugs and on the case underside, with no letter prefix and no year decode in the public domain. Production-window dating relies on dealer documents, original Garantie cards, and the Rolex code-card era which started in 2020.
The reference does not host the kind of layered internal map that defines vintage Daytona references. The cal 4130, the Chromalight lume, the engraved gold bezel, and the Oyster bracelet all held constant across the seven-year run. Dial-printing drift across the run is visible to forum collectors on close inspection but has not crossed the threshold from "photographed on some examples" to "documented Mark variant" — the same situation that applies to the 116500LN run. The 116508 reads as one production with the addition of catalogue dial options at specific points: the green sundust appearing at launch in 2016, the meteorite dial added around 2021.
End of production lands at the cal 4131 successor announcement at Watches & Wonders Geneva 2023, with the 126508 replacing the reference at that show. Allocated examples continued to reach retail into 2024 in some markets.
Movement notes
Cal 4130 sits inside every 116508 — the same movement that carried the 116520, 116523, 116528, 116519, and 116518 from 2000 onward. Vertical-clutch chronograph coupling, column-wheel switching, 72-hour power reserve, 44 jewels, 28,800 vph (4 Hz), Parachrom blue hairspring, COSC certification with the Superlative Chronometer regulation specification on later production. Hour and minute counters share a single side of the movement, the chronograph engages without judder on the second hand because of the vertical clutch, and the mainspring can be replaced without uncasing the watch.
The 116508 sits at the close of the cal 4130's twenty-three-year production run. The successor 126508 carries the cal 4131 with the Chronergy escapement Rolex rolled across the three-hand sport lines through the 2010s and earlier 2020s; the architectural change is internal-efficiency rather than power-reserve, and the 4131 keeps the column-wheel and vertical-clutch core that the 4130 introduced.
For the full caliber lineage and the 4030-to-4130-to-4131 architecture comparison, see Reference:Movements#cal-4130.
Dial map
The 116508 dial catalogue is the most varied of the cal 4130 yellow gold Oyster Daytonas. Standard layouts carry across from the 116528 with refreshed printing and the Chromalight lume; two new variants — the green sundust and the meteorite — were introduced inside the 116508's run and define its place in the modern Daytona collector market.
| Dial | Reference suffix | Period | Distinguishing features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Champagne with gold markers | 116508-0006 | 2016–2023 | Champagne base; gold-tone sub-dial rings; applied gold five-minute markers |
| Black with gold markers | 116508-0004 | 2016–2023 | Black base; applied gold markers; red "Daytona" above the 6 o'clock sub-register |
| White ("Panda") with black sub-dials | 116508-0001 | 2016–2023 | White base, three contrasting black sub-dials, applied gold markers |
| Green sundust with gold markers | 116508-0013 | 2016–2023 | Sundust-finish green base, applied gold markers; the "John Mayer" dial after his 2019 Hodinkee Talking Watches feature |
| Black with green Arabic numerals | 116508-0009 | 2016–2023 | Black base with green Arabic numerals at the hour positions |
| Black with diamond markers | 116508-0008 | 2016–2023 | Black base with applied factory diamond hour markers |
| Mother-of-pearl, white | 116508-0010 (variants) | mid-to-late production | White iridescent MOP base with applied gold or diamond markers |
| Mother-of-pearl, black | 116508-0014 (variants) | mid-to-late production | Dark iridescent MOP base with applied gold or diamond markers |
| Meteorite with black sub-dials | 116508-0015 | 2021–2023 | Solid Gibeon meteorite slice with reverse-panda black sub-dials and applied gold markers |
| Pavé and pavé-with-coloured-stones | catalogue late production | late production | Factory pavé with ruby or sapphire accents — case-by-case authentication required |
The green sundust 116508-0013 is the variant that defines the reference's recent collector profile. Rolex introduced the configuration at the 2016 launch as the first time a corporate-Rolex-green dial had appeared on the Daytona. John Mayer highlighted it on Hodinkee's Talking Watches in 2019, and the secondary market for the variant accelerated sharply in the months after the episode aired — the green-dial 116508 has carried "John Mayer" as a collector nickname in the years since. Rolex's decision to discontinue the variant alongside the rest of the 116508 in 2023 closed the production window without warning at most authorised dealers.
The meteorite 116508-0015 entered the catalogue in 2021. The dial is cut from a slice of the Gibeon iron meteorite (Namibia, identified 1836), with the natural Widmanstätten pattern visible across the dial face and three black-finished sub-dials in a reverse-panda layout. Production ran for two catalogue years before the cal 4131 successor took over in 2023, making the configuration one of the shortest-run dial variants in the cal 4130 yellow gold lineage.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown
The 116508 case is 40mm in 18k yellow gold, with the same lug, case-flank, and crown-guard profile as the rest of the cal 4130 family. Case finishing is mixed — polished bezel, polished case sides, brushed lug tops — and lug-to-lug runs around 47mm consistent with the rest of the in-house Daytona generation. Water resistance is 100m / 330ft. Triplock crown at 3 o'clock, screw-down chronograph pushers at 2 and 4.
The bezel is engraved 18k yellow gold with the tachymetre scale. No Cerachrom: the 116508 is one of the configurations Rolex deliberately kept on the engraved-gold bezel through the cal 4130 generation, with the Cerachrom alternative living on the 116515LN Everose and 116519LN white gold sibling references. The engraved-gold tachymetre on the 116508 carries the same numerical layout as the 116528 it replaced, with the scale running from 60 to 400 around the ring.
The crystal is flat sapphire with no Cyclops. The chronograph pushers screw down to maintain the 100m water rating and have to be unscrewed before the chronograph can be operated, the same configuration the cal 4130 generation has used since the 116520 in 2000. Pusher-screw feel and travel match the rest of the family. Case-finishing routines at Rolex Service Center after 2016 have remained consistent with the 116528 era, with refinishing on heavily-polished examples a routine secondary-market issue that suppresses prices on otherwise good watches.
Bracelets, end links, and clasps
The 116508 ships on a full 18k yellow gold Oyster bracelet — same SEL Oyster construction as the steel 116500LN's 78490 and the Rolesor 116503's 78493, with centre and outer links machined in 18k yellow gold. End links are integral to the bracelet (SEL — solid end links) rather than separable stamped pieces. The bracelet tracks the same Easylink-equipped Oysterlock clasp architecture as the rest of the cal 4130 generation.
The clasp is the modern Oysterlock with the Easylink 5mm comfort extension — a lever-and-keeper inside the clasp body that gives a five-millimetre micro-adjustment without tools. The Daytona never adopted the Glidelock micro-extension that came to the Submariner-line clasps in 2010; Easylink is the only on-bracelet adjustment the 116508 ever offered. The clasp blade carries a date code in the random three-character alphanumeric format that has run across the Rolex Sport line since 2011, and on SEL bracelets the date code, part number, and Rolex crown are stamped into the underside of the end link itself rather than the clasp blade alone. See Reference:Bracelets for the full date-code key.
The 78498 designation appears in some auction catalogue and dealer documentation for the full yellow gold Oyster bracelet variant; documentation across published sources is uneven, and the bracelet is more often identified by material rather than by reference number on auction lots. David Boettcher's broader Daytona bracelet reference at vintagewatchstraps.com carries the configuration alongside the steel and Rolesor variants without breaking it out as a numbered branch.
Special branches
The "John Mayer" green sundust
The 116508-0013 green sundust dial is the reference's headline collector variant. Rolex introduced the configuration at the 2016 launch as the first appearance of corporate-Rolex-green on a Daytona dial; the choice was a departure from the broader cal 4130 colour palette of champagne, black, white, and MOP. Hodinkee's Talking Watches episode featuring John Mayer (2019) singled the watch out as an underappreciated current-production reference, and the secondary market re-rated the configuration in the months that followed. Authorised-dealer waitlists on the green-dial 116508 ran for years through the late 2010s and early 2020s, and completed private trades climbed steeply through the 2021–2022 luxury-watch peak before correcting alongside the rest of the modern-Daytona market in 2023.
The "John Mayer" nickname is collector usage rather than a Rolex designation, and Rolex has issued no commentary on the variant's place in its 2016 launch programme. The end-of-production cutover in 2023 closed the window without a successor: the cal 4131 126508 catalogue at launch did not carry the green sundust dial, leaving the 116508-0013 as the only Rolex-catalogue green Daytona of any era through that period.
Meteorite 116508-0015
The meteorite-dial variant was introduced in 2021 with a reverse-panda layout — meteorite base, three black-finished sub-dials, applied gold markers and hands. Production ran two catalogue years before the cal 4131 successor took over in 2023. The dial is cut from a slice of the Gibeon meteorite (Namibia, 1836), and individual examples differ in the visible Widmanstätten pattern. The variant entered the secondary market at a clear premium to the standard layouts and has held that position through the post-discontinuation period.
Tiffany & Co. and other double-signed examples
Retailer double-signing on the 116508 follows the broader pattern of the cal 4130 era — Tiffany-signed dials are documented on standard champagne and black layouts, with the signature applied below the 6 o'clock Cosmograph block. Other retailer signatures are thinner on the ground than in the Zenith-era catalogue, and 116508-specific double-signed lots that anchor a market-grade record have not surfaced through 2025 in the published auction literature.
Auction record
The 116508 auction record is anchored by the green sundust 116508-0013 — the green-dial variant has appeared at Christie's, Sotheby's, and Phillips at premium estimates throughout the 2019–2024 period, with the John Mayer effect and the post-2023 discontinuation both pushing pricing well above the engraved-gold floor for the configuration. The meteorite 116508-0015 has carried similarly premium pricing since the 2021 introduction, with the two-year production window and the natural-material dial both driving auction interest.
Standard champagne, black, and white-Panda 116508s anchor the floor of the cal 4130 yellow gold Oyster market, with full-set examples carrying matching box, papers, and Rolex code card commanding a clear premium over partial-set lots. The reference trades on configuration and provenance rather than on headline single-watch records — no 116508 lot has approached the kind of single-artifact result that defines Paul Newman's 6239 or the Unicorn 6265.
The 2023 transition to the 126508 has closed the engraved-gold-bezel yellow gold Oyster Daytona configuration permanently. Used prices on the 116508 have firmed across the post-discontinuation period, particularly on the green sundust and meteorite variants, with the broader cal 4130 yellow gold market now reading as a closed catalogue rather than a live production.
Sources
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
- Karyn Orrico, "Vintage Rolex Daytona: The Gold Standard", Sotheby's, 2024-12-17
- Erik Slaven, "In-Depth: The History of the Rolex Daytona, The Emblematic Racing Chronograph", Monochrome, 2024-12-20
- Paul Boutros, "In-Depth: A Vintage Watch Nerd's Critical Dissection of the Rolex Daytona, Past to Present (Part 3/3)", Hodinkee, 2013-03
- Ross Povey, "A Movement in History: The Zenith-driven Rolex Daytona", Revolution Watch, 2018-09-03
- "New Rolex Daytona 2016 - What Changed", Fratello, 2016-01-01
- Jack Forster, "A Week On The Wrist: The Rolex Daytona Ref. 116500LN", Hodinkee, 2020-01-01
- Frank Geelen, "Rolex Daytona 116500LN in steel with Cerachrom black bezel Hands-On", Monochrome, 2016-03-17
- Brice Goulard, "Market Analysis: Continuous Rise in Price of the Rolex Daytona 116500LN", Monochrome, 2021-03-05
- Revolution editorial, "Hard to Thrill", Revolution, 2017-06-20
- David Boettcher, "Vintage Watch Straps — Rolex bracelet and clasp reference", vintagewatchstraps.com, 2026-04-18