The first in this series of articles looked at identifying watches from the 1990-2018 era that could become future classics. Part 1 highlighted the Rolex Submariner 16610LV. This article, Part 2 of 8 will look at the Rolex GMT-Master II 16760. It has man...
Well I can find one for the price of a brand new Ford Fiesta. Never knew that the word ‘date’ was that expensive. So now I kind of understand that Nicolas hates the date. It costs money! Kidding aside, thank you (again) for a very informative document and...
.....the no-date is just extremely rare. The date version with B&P is hard enough. The positive side is that it is not more expensive than a modern one.
Even my worn out old sponge can absorb some of this, which I appreciate! But, I have to ask, is this soon-to-be-syndicated series restricted to Rolex by design, or may we pursue this line of thinking among another history-rich maison or two?
.....as doing on the research on modern Rolex has provided 7-8 examples of under-appreciated watches that tick many boxes that collectors enjoy. Among other manufacturers, I have not really found the same..... I think a part of this is that Rolex, histori...
All jokes aside, another great post about Rolex vintage, for me being a newbie in that field, this is very informative, I would like in the upcoming years finding a Rolex from my birth year. I'm waiting for the next 6.
.....has become differentiated by issues like double Swiss, underlines, different scripts, etc etc.....people assume that modern Rolex is commoditised.....that isn't true. Its full of things to discover and also some very very rare dials. Makes it a hunt....
I do miss my (full set) rail 1665 every once in a while.... such a charming piece... but you are absolutely right, there are tons to discover and a new world of vintage is coming now that 80s and soon 90s will become vintage (and me for that matter...)......
This reference transitioned to this type of dials in 1983, so at the same time the 16760 was introduced. Maybe a tie? Interestingly, like for the 16760, the first versions of dials white gold hour markers on the 16750 omitted the word "Date"
The 16750 was produced from 1981-1988, but it wasn’t until after 1983 that they started using the white gold on the dial. The earlier dials were Matte and did not have white gold indexes. The latter dials did. The 16760 was produced from 1983-1988, but us...
But the transition date on the 16750 is more debatable. Rolex appears to have transitioned to glossy dials on the 16750 in late 1983 / early 1984. There are a number of watches documented from the 8,3 million range sporting a "No date" glossy dial with wh...