The Rolex Forums   The Rolex Watch

ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX


Go Back   Rolex Forums - Rolex Forum > Rolex & Tudor Watch Topics > Rolex Reference Library

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 30 August 2020, 02:46 PM   #1
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Every discontinued Rolex model name

This is my attempt to list every discontinued model name that has appeared on a Rolex watch. Often when old/random Rolex model names are brought up online, people mention watches released under the standalone Oyster brand (like Essex, Lincoln, Edison, Grenfell, Lipton, Lady Dudley, Junior Sport, Raleigh, Commander, Recorda, Chester, Regent, Shipmate, and Pioneer). Here I will focus strictly on proper Rolexes.

I don't really consider movement designations to be model names (like Chronometer, Observatory, Extra/Ultra Prima, Standard, Anti-and Precision) so I won't include those.

Rolex trademarked tons of names that they never used and I'm only including ones I could find pics of. If anyone knows of any others I'm forgetting, please let me know! Here's the list of 50+ discontinued Rolex model names that I could find. They're in alphabetical order except when it makes sense to mention models together:


Air-Tiger, Air-Giant, and Air-Lion
Rolex tried 4 "Air" names beginning in the late 1940's, but only "Air-King" stuck.



Air-King-Date and Explorer Date
Ref. 5700 (smooth bezel) and 5701 (fluted bezel) were released under both the "Air-King-Date" and "Explorer-Date" names. These are some of the only Rolexes with dates that change over slowly from about 9pm-2am instead of clicking cleanly around midnight.



Army



Athlete

The vast majority of Oyster cases have a similar/standard sort of lug shape, but the Athlete has distinctive straight lugs.



Campbell
Named for one of Rolex's first official ambassadors, Sir Malcolm Campbell. Campbell once simultaneously held the land speed and water speed records.



Centregraph and Zerographe
The Zerographe/Centregraph was a monopusher chronograph made in 1937. It was quickly discontinued and never reached serial production, which is bizarre because Rolex clearly put a lot of effort into it as it had Rolex's first in-house (but still not manufacture) chronograph movement and Rolex's first rotating bezel. Perhaps patent infringement issues were involved, as the very similar (and very patented) Weems Watch by Longines debuted around the same time, and some later Centregraphs and Zerographs were made minus the rotating bezel. Rolex also put the name "Centregraph" on a few plain-Jane Oyster Perpetuals for some reason.


Clive



Commando

Supposedly this was originally only available at US military bases in 1969, and later some appeared for sale at Abercrombie & Fitch stores in 1972. The fat hands of the 6429 are pretty sweet.



Corvette



Drake



Dustproof

I'm not entirely sure that "Dustproof" was meant as a model name rather than some sort of designation. Interestingly, the word "Oyster" never appears on a Dustproof even though most of them are Oyster models.



Elegante



Ellsworth



Everest

Rolex toyed with the "Everest" moniker before the more successful "Explorer" name took off.



Falcon



Firefly



GMT-Master

Obviously the GMT-Master II is still going strong, but technically GMT-Master was a different model name. Ref. 16700 was the final GMT-Master.



Hurricane



Imperial



King Midas
and Queen Midas

Gerald Genta designed the King Midas, and it had 3 firsts for Rolex: a sapphire crystal, a hidden clasp, and an integrated bracelet. Elvis wore one. There are some ladies' versions too, and the Queen Midas isn't just a cute nickname--it's written on the clasp. The later Midases were considered part of the Cellini collection.



Ladydate



Leigh



Majestic
and Seaforth

These watches were sometimes advertised together; they're the same thing except the Seaforth has a seconds subdial. The Majestic cost slightly more; having a center seconds hand was considered a feature back then. Many of these models are marked "Observatory."



Marconi
Marconi was mostly an early sub-brand of Rolex, and many Marconi watches had Rolex improperly painted on much later. However, at least some Rolex watches were legitimately released with Marconi as the model name.



Meritus



Metropolitan



Monometer

A short-lived alternative name for the first Turn-O-Graphs.



Orchid
This name was used for decades on various small gold ladies' watches, often with wacky shapes.



Oyster
While the Oyster brand is obviously still hugely important to Rolex, they no longer use "Oyster" as a standalone model name like they used to.



Oysterdate



Oysterquartz

"Oysterquartz" was more of a product line than a model name per se, but I feel like it's worth mentioning. The Oysterquartz Day-Date and Oysterquartz Datejust were in the Rolex catalog from the late 1970's until the early 2000's. Some of the first OQ Datejusts said "Datejust" at the top and "Oysterquartz" at the bottom, instead of the more common "Oysterquartz Datejust" at the top with chronometer text at the bottom.



Pall Mall



Prince

Prince may have been the first model name Wilsdorf ever put on a watch; in the beginning he was just focusing on getting the word "Rolex" out there.

Prince wristwatches were made from the 1920's-1940's. Rolex revived the Prince model in the early 2000's and gave it a clear caseback; it remained an option on Rolex.com as late as 2015.



Princess
Princess never actually appeared on a dial without "Sporting" preceding it, but it was clearly used by Rolex as a distinct model, including variants like the 8 Facets, Trapeze, Glayola, Egyptian, Lotus, Rochettina, and Bouts Arrondis (Rounded Edge). Other model names from the 1930's that never appeared on a dial include Dauphine, Duchess, Marquis and Queen.



Prince Elegant, Prince Elegante, Prince Royal, and Prince Imperial
Rolex apparently tried several variants of the Prince name, sometimes even on pocket watches. The Prince was known as the "doctor's watch" because of its relatively easy-to-read, large seconds subdial. This was before center seconds hands were common, and the minute/hour hands did not overlap at all with the seconds area (except on the Prince Elegant/Elegante models). Prince Brancard, Prince Railway, and Prince Classic are other designations that Rolex sometimes used in advertising, though I don't believe those names ever appeared on a dial. The unique Prince watches with center seconds are sometimes referred to as "Prince Aerodynamic" but I don't think that name appeared on a dial, either.



Sporting Prince and Sporting Princess
A portable fold-up watch was called a "travel watch" when marketed to men and a "purse watch" when marketed to women. Rolex apparently made a few wristwatches with "Sporting Princess" on the dial, too.



Royal, Royalite, and Royal Giant
Rolex threw the word "Royal" on a lot of entry-level manual-wind references with seconds subdials in the 1930's and 1940's. Royalites, meanwhile, almost always had center seconds. By the 1950's Rolex had apparently dropped the Royalite moniker, and the Royal kept on trucking for another decade or so (with center seconds now). I believe most Royals and Royalites are between 30 and 32mm wide. Some later Royals were 34mm, including the rare Royal Giant. I suppose it's worth mentioning that Tudor released an Asia-only line of Royal watches in 2020.



Scientific



Skyrocket



Space-Dweller

Short-lived Explorer alternative.



Speed



Speedking
and Speedking Elegant

The "Speedking" moniker appeared on several manual-wind 30mm references from the 1940's-1960's. The "Speedking Elegant" name only briefly appeared on the 33mm reference 4365, which was also the first reference to be named "Air-King." Air-King clearly won that marketing battle.



Sport and Sporting Model



Submarine and Aqua
The Rolex Oyster wasn't the first waterproof wristwatch, just the first commercially successful/viable one. The Submarine (a.k.a. "Aqua") is a hermetic watch; several other brands made similar waterproof watches in the early 1920's. It seems Wilsdorf was later considering using Aqua as a standalone alternative to the Oyster brand; there are even some "Aqua Patent" crowns. "Aqua" most frequently appears on dials co-branded by Solar, the watch brand of Eaton's (a Canadian department store). Indian retailer names like P. Orr & Sons and Lund & Blockley can be found on other Aquas.



Transcontinental
The Datejust Transcontinental (ref. 6602, circa 1957) is exceedingly rare; it's the only Rolex ever made with a 12-hour rotating bezel. It's basically a Turn-O-Graph with a different bezel. According to an old forum rumor, the founder of Delta Airlines owned one.



Turn-O-Graph
This iconic model lasted from the early 1950's until 2014 or so, but only the first and last generations of Turn-O-Graph have it written on the dial.



Tru-Beat
This model was designed to only tick once per second so doctors could easily count pulses. Nowadays most of the ones left have a broken stop-seconds complication, in which case they "sweep" like a normal Rolex.



Verislim and Veriflat



Wellington



If you see something else on a dial (like Asprey, Astrua, Verga, Beyer, etc.) it's possible it could be a retailer co-branding rather than a model name. Thanks for reading!
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 30 August 2020, 08:39 PM   #2
crowncollection
"TRF" Member
 
crowncollection's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2011
Real Name: David
Location: australia
Posts: 20,214
Great post again cheers


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
__________________
watches many
crowncollection is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31 August 2020, 12:15 AM   #3
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Quote:
Originally Posted by powerfunk View Post
Anti-and Precision
Whoops, I meant "Anti-Magnetique and Precision."

Quote:
Originally Posted by crowncollection View Post
Great post again cheers
Thank you
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31 August 2020, 12:56 AM   #4
mackychase
"TRF" Member
 
mackychase's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2019
Real Name: Mac
Location: Philippines
Watch: Hmm..
Posts: 70
Awesome post! Thanks!

It's really fun to see how some of these models' characteristics trickled down to Tudor.
__________________
The Rolex Milgauss is the coolest watch ever. There, I said it.
mackychase is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18 October 2020, 12:40 AM   #5
Xeramic
"TRF" Member
 
Xeramic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 56
Hi,

a huge work, well done - doesn't get the deserved attention.

Some more co-names:
Viceroy
Victory
Douglas (unknown, but have a catalog picture)
Sub-Aqua (not only Submarine or Aqua)
Unicorn

Greetings,
Xeramic
Xeramic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18 October 2020, 02:43 AM   #6
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Quote:
Originally Posted by Xeramic View Post
Hi,

a huge work, well done - doesn't get the deserved attention.

Some more co-names:
Viceroy
Victory
Douglas (unknown, but have a catalog picture)
Sub-Aqua (not only Submarine or Aqua)
Unicorn

Greetings,
Xeramic
Hey thanks! Good call, I'm not sure how I forgot the Victory and Viceroy. I'd never heard of the Douglas or Sub-Aqua; if you can find that pic of the Douglas that'd be great! I was aware of Unicorns made under the Oyster brand and as a standalone brand but if you have any pics of a legit "Rolex Unicorn" that'd be awesome too!

Victory:


Viceroy:


Sub-Aqua:
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18 October 2020, 03:33 AM   #7
Xeramic
"TRF" Member
 
Xeramic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 56
Here's a Rolex Unicorn (seen with Rolex Watch Co. as well as with Rolex only, 1920s):
b8c6b16c-32f6-467e-828e-8d97b7840810.jpg

52221a85-fe7e-4c7e-a5b8-744034cbfd25.jpg

And the ad (about 1947) for the Douglas:
1947_compressed.jpg

Best,
Xeramic
Xeramic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18 October 2020, 04:08 AM   #8
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Awesome stuff, thanks Xeramic!
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 19 October 2020, 06:34 AM   #9
Xeramic
"TRF" Member
 
Xeramic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 56
You're welcome - thank goes to you for your effort on this topic :)

Greetings,
Xeramic
Xeramic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 19 October 2020, 08:24 AM   #10
Jackie Daytona
2024 ROLEX DATEJUST41 Pledge Member
 
Jackie Daytona's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2019
Real Name: Brian
Location: Nashville
Watch: 16750
Posts: 6,563
Cool stuff. Thank you all for sharing.
__________________
16750 | 6516(wife’s) | 126334 | 16570 | SBGA413 | SRPE33 | 126610LV
Jackie Daytona is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 19 November 2020, 01:33 AM   #11
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
My goodness, how could I possibly forget the world-famous Rite-Time:

powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 21 November 2020, 10:52 AM   #12
keltzar
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Singapore
Posts: 31
Very cool. I have forgotten all about the short run pieces like the tru-beat.

My friend sold his Space Dweller 2 years ago. He took a hit beause he had the watch dial refinished by Rolex at the local rolex service centre... by Rolex at their suggestion ...in the 1990s.

He has since misplaced the paperwork... and had to sell it on the basis the dial was refinished aftermarket.
keltzar is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 23 November 2020, 12:48 AM   #13
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Quote:
Originally Posted by keltzar View Post
watch dial refinished by Rolex at the local rolex service centre... by Rolex
Interesting. Was that in the Philippines by any chance? I've heard that the Manila RSC used to refinish dials in the past but I hadn't heard of any other RSC's doing that.
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 25 November 2020, 05:08 AM   #14
TheVTCGuy
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Real Name: Paul
Location: San Diego
Watch: 126619LB
Posts: 21,540
Wow... I had no idea there were so many discontinued names. Amazing! It kind of makes you wonder, 50, 60, 70 years or more from now will “Daytona” and “Submariner” and “Explorer” still be around?
TheVTCGuy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 25 November 2020, 06:31 AM   #15
spoilsofwar01
"TRF" Member
 
spoilsofwar01's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2017
Real Name: "H"
Location: England
Watch: ing Rainclouds
Posts: 1,439
Wow

Some real gems, many thanks for sharing
__________________
"H"
5513 Submariner 1968
114270 Explorer 2005
Smiths W10 1968
Tissot Seastar 2011
spoilsofwar01 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14 December 2020, 10:02 AM   #16
Xeramic
"TRF" Member
 
Xeramic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 56
more

Found another one: Rolex Windsor!

Pics from an eBay auction. A bit an unusual piece, case marked as Windsor only and the movement as Rolex just on the dial side, but looks legit:
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Windsor.jpg (241.6 KB, 1776 views)
File Type: jpg Windsor 1.jpg (256.9 KB, 1766 views)
File Type: jpg Windsor 3.jpg (272.2 KB, 1762 views)
File Type: jpg Windsor 6.jpg (251.4 KB, 1769 views)
File Type: jpg Windsor 2.jpg (245.5 KB, 1766 views)
Xeramic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14 December 2020, 11:34 AM   #17
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Quote:
Originally Posted by Xeramic View Post
Found another one: Rolex Windsor!
Nice, thanks for sharing! I'd be skeptical of that piece if it didn't include a special Rolex Windsor box. I'll be darned:



Edit: Although now that I look closer, does the text say "A Rolex from Windsor?" In that case maybe Windsor was a retailer.
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15 December 2020, 02:47 AM   #18
Xeramic
"TRF" Member
 
Xeramic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 56
No, it says "A Rolex product" (that's also what the seller states):
Attached Images
File Type: jpg s-l1600 (20).jpg (213.8 KB, 1760 views)
Xeramic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15 December 2020, 10:13 AM   #19
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Quote:
Originally Posted by Xeramic View Post
No, it says "A Rolex product" (that's also what the seller states):
Interesting, well that settles it then. The fact that they had an entire marketing vision for this model ("Beauty, Efficiency, and Style") and its own box (similar to the Wellington) makes me surprised it's not a model anyone seems to know about!
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15 December 2020, 12:30 PM   #20
77T
2024 SubLV41 Pledge Member
 
77T's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Real Name: PaulG
Location: Georgia
Posts: 41,835
Every discontinued Rolex model name

Maybe when George V changed the reigning UK monarch’s name from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to Windsor, Hans was inspired. Of course that happened in 1917 and the Windsor seems 1930’s.

The cal. 59 inside it would mean for Canadian export? Seems the 15 & 17 jewel movements were all inside Canadian models.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
__________________


Does anyone really know what time it is?
77T is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18 December 2020, 05:11 AM   #21
EdRol
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2020
Location: US
Posts: 13
Quote:
Originally Posted by powerfunk View Post
This is my attempt to list every discontinued model name that has appeared on a Rolex watch. Often when old/random Rolex model names are brought up online, people mention watches released under the standalone Oyster brand (like Essex, Lincoln, Edison, Grenfell, Lipton, Lady Dudley, Junior Sport, Raleigh, Commander, Recorda, Chester, Regent, Shipmate, and Pioneer). Here I will focus strictly on proper Rolexes.

I don't really consider movement designations to be model names (like Chronometer, Observatory, Extra/Ultra Prima, Standard, Anti-and Precision) so I won't include those.

Rolex trademarked tons of names that they never used and I'm only including ones I could find pics of. If anyone knows of any others I'm forgetting, please let me know! Here's the list of 50+ discontinued Rolex model names that I could find. They're in alphabetical order except when it makes sense to mention models together:


Air-Tiger, Air-Giant, and Air-Lion
Rolex tried 4 "Air" names beginning in the late 1940's, but only "Air-King" stuck.



Air-King-Date and Explorer Date
Ref. 5700 (smooth bezel) and 5701 (fluted bezel) were released under both the "Air-King-Date" and "Explorer-Date" names. These are some of the only Rolexes with dates that change over slowly from about 9pm-2am instead of clicking cleanly around midnight.



Army



Athlete

The vast majority of Oyster cases have a similar/standard sort of lug shape, but the Athlete has distinctive straight lugs.



Campbell
Named for one of Rolex's first official ambassadors, Sir Malcolm Campbell. Campbell once simultaneously held the land speed and water speed records.



Centregraph and Zerographe
The Zerographe/Centregraph was a monopusher chronograph made in 1937. It was quickly discontinued and never reached serial production, which is bizarre because Rolex clearly put a lot of effort into it as it had Rolex's first in-house (but still not manufacture) chronograph movement and Rolex's first rotating bezel. Perhaps patent infringement issues were involved, as the very similar (and very patented) Weems Watch by Longines debuted around the same time, and some later Centregraphs and Zerographs were made minus the rotating bezel. Rolex also put the name "Centregraph" on a few plain-Jane Oyster Perpetuals for some reason.


Clive



Commando

Supposedly this was originally only available at US military bases in 1969, and later some appeared for sale at Abercrombie & Fitch stores in 1972. The fat hands of the 6429 are pretty sweet.



Corvette



Drake



Dustproof

I'm not entirely sure that "Dustproof" was meant as a model name rather than some sort of designation. Interestingly, the word "Oyster" never appears on a Dustproof even though most of them are Oyster models.



Elegante



Ellsworth



Everest

Rolex toyed with the "Everest" moniker before the more successful "Explorer" name took off.



Falcon



Firefly



GMT-Master

Obviously the GMT-Master II is still going strong, but technically GMT-Master was a different model name. Ref. 16700 was the final GMT-Master.



Hurricane



Imperial



King Midas
and Queen Midas

Gerald Genta designed the King Midas, and it had 3 firsts for Rolex: a sapphire crystal, a hidden clasp, and an integrated bracelet. Elvis wore one. There are some ladies' versions too, and the Queen Midas isn't just a cute nickname--it's written on the clasp. The later Midases were considered part of the Cellini collection.



Ladydate



Leigh



Majestic
and Seaforth

These watches were sometimes advertised together; they're the same thing except the Seaforth has a seconds subdial. The Majestic cost slightly more; having a center seconds hand was considered a feature back then. Many of these models are marked "Observatory."



Marconi
Marconi was mostly an early sub-brand of Rolex, and many Marconi watches had Rolex improperly painted on much later. However, at least some Rolex watches were legitimately released with Marconi as the model name.



Meritus



Metropolitan



Monometer

A short-lived alternative name for the first Turn-O-Graphs.



Orchid
This name was used for decades on various small gold ladies' watches, often with wacky shapes.



Oyster
While the Oyster brand is obviously still hugely important to Rolex, they no longer use "Oyster" as a standalone model name like they used to.



Oysterdate



Oysterquartz

"Oysterquartz" was more of a product line than a model name per se, but I feel like it's worth mentioning. The Oysterquartz Day-Date and Oysterquartz Datejust were in the Rolex catalog from the late 1970's until the early 2000's. Some of the first OQ Datejusts said "Datejust" at the top and "Oysterquartz" at the bottom, instead of the more common "Oysterquartz Datejust" at the top with chronometer text at the bottom.



Pall Mall



Prince

Prince may have been the first model name Wilsdorf ever put on a watch; in the beginning he was just focusing on getting the word "Rolex" out there.

Prince wristwatches were made from the 1920's-1940's. Rolex revived the Prince model in the early 2000's and gave it a clear caseback; it remained an option on Rolex.com as late as 2015.



Princess
Princess never actually appeared on a dial without "Sporting" preceding it, but it was clearly used by Rolex as a distinct model, including variants like the 8 Facets, Trapeze, Glayola, Egyptian, Lotus, Rochettina, and Bouts Arrondis (Rounded Edge). Other model names from the 1930's that never appeared on a dial include Dauphine, Duchess, Marquis and Queen.



Prince Elegant, Prince Elegante, Prince Royal, and Prince Imperial
Rolex apparently tried several variants of the Prince name, sometimes even on pocket watches. The Prince was known as the "doctor's watch" because of its relatively easy-to-read, large seconds subdial. This was before center seconds hands were common, and the minute/hour hands did not overlap at all with the seconds area (except on the Prince Elegant/Elegante models). Prince Brancard, Prince Railway, and Prince Classic are other designations that Rolex sometimes used in advertising, though I don't believe those names ever appeared on a dial. The unique Prince watches with center seconds are sometimes referred to as "Prince Aerodynamic" but I don't think that name appeared on a dial, either.



Sporting Prince and Sporting Princess
A portable fold-up watch was called a "travel watch" when marketed to men and a "purse watch" when marketed to women. Rolex apparently made a few wristwatches with "Sporting Princess" on the dial, too.



Royal, Royalite, and Royal Giant
Rolex threw the word "Royal" on a lot of entry-level manual-wind references with seconds subdials in the 1930's and 1940's. Royalites, meanwhile, almost always had center seconds. By the 1950's Rolex had apparently dropped the Royalite moniker, and the Royal kept on trucking for another decade or so (with center seconds now). I believe most Royals and Royalites are between 30 and 32mm wide. Some later Royals were 34mm, including the rare Royal Giant. I suppose it's worth mentioning that Tudor released an Asia-only line of Royal watches in 2020.



Scientific



Skyrocket



Space-Dweller

Short-lived Explorer alternative.



Speed



Speedking
and Speedking Elegant

The "Speedking" moniker appeared on several manual-wind 30mm references from the 1940's-1960's. The "Speedking Elegant" name only briefly appeared on the 33mm reference 4365, which was also the first reference to be named "Air-King." Air-King clearly won that marketing battle.



Sport and Sporting Model



Submarine and Aqua
The Rolex Oyster wasn't the first waterproof wristwatch, just the first commercially successful/viable one. The Submarine (a.k.a. "Aqua") is a hermetic watch; several other brands made similar waterproof watches in the early 1920's. It seems Wilsdorf was later considering using Aqua as a standalone alternative to the Oyster brand; there are even some "Aqua Patent" crowns. "Aqua" most frequently appears on dials co-branded by Solar, the watch brand of Eaton's (a Canadian department store). Indian retailer names like P. Orr & Sons and Lund & Blockley can be found on other Aquas.



Transcontinental
The Datejust Transcontinental (ref. 6602, circa 1957) is exceedingly rare; it's the only Rolex ever made with a 12-hour rotating bezel. It's basically a Turn-O-Graph with a different bezel. According to an old forum rumor, the founder of Delta Airlines owned one.



Turn-O-Graph
This iconic model lasted from the early 1950's until 2014 or so, but only the first and last generations of Turn-O-Graph have it written on the dial.



Tru-Beat
This model was designed to only tick once per second so doctors could easily count pulses. Nowadays most of the ones left have a broken stop-seconds complication, in which case they "sweep" like a normal Rolex.



Verislim and Veriflat



Wellington



If you see something else on a dial (like Asprey, Astrua, Verga, Beyer, etc.) it's possible it could be a retailer co-branding rather than a model name. Thanks for reading!
Wow! Absolutely fascinating!
EdRol is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15 February 2021, 08:58 AM   #22
MaxVonFuerstenwalde
"TRF" Member
 
MaxVonFuerstenwalde's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2021
Real Name: Gregor Vass
Location: MALIBU
Watch: 126710MKI 116619LV
Posts: 10
this is great
MaxVonFuerstenwalde is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 19 April 2021, 06:06 AM   #23
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Oyster Perpetual Date (After 65+ years, discontinued as of April 2021):




Dual-Time (Discontinued as of April 2021):

powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 21 April 2021, 10:51 AM   #24
RTG
2024 SubLV41 Pledge Member
 
RTG's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2018
Location: USA
Watch: YM42 Ti
Posts: 2,645
This was an awesome read. Thank you so much for sharing.
__________________
Official Member "WIS-CON" Las Vegas International GTG 2019
RTG is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 23 April 2021, 08:17 AM   #25
crowncollection
"TRF" Member
 
crowncollection's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2011
Real Name: David
Location: australia
Posts: 20,214
Oyster perpetual explorer 39mm seems gone ?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
__________________
watches many
crowncollection is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 24 April 2021, 03:50 AM   #26
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Quote:
Originally Posted by crowncollection View Post
Oyster perpetual explorer 39mm seems gone?
True! They are keeping the "Explorer" moniker alive with the 124270 though. I doubt they'll let that one die anytime soon!
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9 June 2021, 12:36 AM   #27
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Forgot King-of-Wings:

powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 3 November 2021, 01:57 AM   #28
staffs964
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2021
Location: Canada
Posts: 1
Unusual Royalite (Corvet type face)

Hi
This watch belonged to my wife's grandfather circa WWII. I have trawled the internet in an effort to find a similar-looking Royalite. can anyone shed any light on the watch? Serial # 335891

Many Thanks
Attached Images
File Type: jpg IMG_5339.jpg (64.5 KB, 1143 views)
File Type: jpg IMG_5340.jpg (60.7 KB, 1140 views)
File Type: jpg IMG_5341.jpg (42.6 KB, 1139 views)
File Type: jpg IMG_5342.jpg (25.5 KB, 1139 views)
staffs964 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16 November 2021, 03:34 PM   #29
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
Stumbled across another one I'd never heard of before:

Dauphin
powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18 November 2021, 12:24 AM   #30
powerfunk
"TRF" Member
 
powerfunk's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Real Name: Rob
Location: Boston, MA
Watch: 1530
Posts: 3,799
I'd heard of a Tudor Bristol but I guess a Rolex Bristol existed in the Canadian market:

powerfunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

DavidSW Watches

Takuya Watches

My Watch LLC

OCWatches

Wrist Aficionado

Asset Appeal


*Banners Of The Month*
This space is provided to horological resources.





Copyright ©2004-2024, The Rolex Forums. All Rights Reserved.

ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX

Rolex is a registered trademark of ROLEX USA. The Rolex Forums is not affiliated with ROLEX USA in any way.