Rolex. A Fine Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Sigma Dial and "Tropical" Registers
Rolex. A Fine Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Sigma Dial and "Tropical" Registers
Rolex. A Fine Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Sigma Dial and "Tropical" Registers
Rolex. A Fine Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Sigma Dial and "Tropical" Registers
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Rolex. A Fine Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Sigma Dial and "Tropical" Registers

Signed Rolex, Oyster, Cosmograph, Ref. 6265, Case No. 4'138'226, Circa 1975

Details
Rolex. A Fine Stainless Steel Chronograph Wristwatch with Sigma Dial and "Tropical" Registers
Signed Rolex, Oyster, Cosmograph, Ref. 6265, Case No. 4'138'226, Circa 1975
Movement: Manual, Cal. 727, 17 jewels
Dial: Silvered, baton numerals with luminous accents, luminous hands, three black subsidiary dials
Case: Stainless steel, screw back, two round screw-down buttons in the band, inside case back stamped 6263, 37mm diam.
Strap/Buckle: Associated leather strap, Rolex steel buckle
Accompanied by: A Rolex presentation box and outer packaging

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Rebecca Ross
Rebecca Ross

Lot Essay

A true Oyster case is defined by the screw-down case back, screw-down crown and screw-down chronograph pushers, thus ensuring increased water resistance. Reference 6265 is indeed one of these highly sought-after models. Together with its sister reference 6263 (the difference being the black-insert bezel rather than the metal one), the reference 6265 is the final evolution of manually wound Daytonas. It is defined, beyond its metal insert and screw-down pushers, by the caliber 727 (evolved from caliber 722-1).

One will notice the highly attractive "tropical' registers. Over time, the subsidiary dials have changed from black to a dark brown color, the result of the dial aging in its own unique way. It is an exceptionally charismatic example with the registers now a “tropical” shade that perfectly complements the silver sunburst dial.

The present reference 6265 features a dial that is known as a "Sigma" dial, indicated by two small Sigma symbols on either side of the "T Swiss T". The Sigma symbols indicate that the baton numerals and hands on a dial are made of gold, in this case white gold. Sigma dials were first seen on the reference 6240, and were nicknamed "Goute A Prior" by Italian collectors and originally referred to the union of three Rolex dial producers: Singer, Stern, and Beyeler. On later references, the Sigma came to refer to indices and hands in gold.



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