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Old 19 March 2020, 01:37 PM   #1
justthebezel
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6239 help needed

I own a few newer Rolexes but nothing really vintage. Please see the photo attached and point out any obvious issues. Any help is appreciated. I can get more photos but wanted to see if it's worth pursuing.
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Old 19 March 2020, 02:41 PM   #2
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I know almost nothing about these, except that it obviously appears to be a Floating Daytona dial. You're a brave man wading into the deep end like this for your first vintage, especially if you truly don't have a lot of first-hand knowledge. Good luck!
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Old 19 March 2020, 02:50 PM   #3
justthebezel
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I have no Rolex vintage experience but a great deal of vintage Speedmaster experience...doesn't help a bit with this one.
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Old 19 March 2020, 10:07 PM   #4
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Hang on. The Vintage Daytona experts will be stoping by shortly
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:03 AM   #5
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Looks like a nice early "small Daytona" dial, I'm guessing '66-'67ish. What's the beginning of the serial number? Cool rivet bracelet.

As for a full vetting, you'd need to see many, many more and better photographs, including of the movement, close-ups of the dial, all four lugs, UV photo of dial/hands, serial and reference engravings, etc .....
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:12 AM   #6
justthebezel
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That's a start, I guess. Thanks. The seller placed it as 1964, but I have not seen the serial or movement. I don't see a serial on the movement as I'm used to with old Speedmasters, so how does know if the movement has been replaced on these?
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:20 AM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swish77 View Post
Looks like a nice early "small Daytona" dial, I'm guessing '66-'67ish.
"Small" or "Floating"? Or is that the same thing?

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I don't see a serial on the movement as I'm used to with old Speedmasters, so how does know if the movement has been replaced on these?
There is sometimes a number on the base-plate, but it is not generally used to identify Rolex watches. The serial is on the case, between the lugs. It should be consistent with the production year of the number inside the case-back, at least within a couple of years. There is no easy way to determine if the movement is original except for careful inspection to determine that it is period-correct. Rolex does not provide extracts.
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:27 AM   #8
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And how about some quick impressions of this Daytona on ebay? The seller sells mostly junk, so this does not fit with his inventory. I'm guessing it must have a couple of glaring issues? Dial? Bezel?



https://www.ebay.com/itm/ROLEX-STAIN...0AAOSwRs1eUshf
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:37 AM   #9
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And why not this one at Sothebys right now for good measure? Please educate me.

https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auct...24_mar-17-2020
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:56 AM   #10
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And why not this one at Sothebys right now for good measure? Please educate me.

https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auct...24_mar-17-2020
Dial has marks, lume plot and edge damage as noted in their description. Case is overpolished. Those factors alone have a substantial impact on the value.
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Old 20 March 2020, 12:59 AM   #11
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"Small" or "Floating"? Or is that the same thing?
The reference to "floating" is usually when the word "Daytona" is slightly elevated above the center sub-dial, unlike on these earlier Daytonas that sometimes had the word on the upper portion of the dial. The word was big on some dials, and small on others.

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And how about some quick impressions of this Daytona on ebay? The seller sells mostly junk, so this does not fit with his inventory. I'm guessing it must have a couple of glaring issues? Dial? Bezel?

Buying off of eBay is a big risk, even for the most educated of vintage Rolex hobbyist. I just wouldn't do it, especially with such a high-priced item.

If you're truly in the market for a four-digit Daytona, I'd spend a couple of dozen hours reading about them and studying dials, bezels, cases, movements, variations, etc ... That's part of the fun anyway, and then you could compare any potential watch purchase with good known examples. Check out the archives on HQ Milton, Sheartime, and other dealers. That's where I'd start.
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Old 20 March 2020, 01:13 AM   #12
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Thanks for the guidance so far. I agree with re to ebay. I'd see the watch in hand before buying, but right now, I don't know enough to know how little I know. I thought the Sothebys watch had polishing issues. Does the dial look right on the ebay watch?
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Old 20 March 2020, 01:31 AM   #13
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6239 help needed

Quote:
Originally Posted by swish77 View Post
The reference to "floating" is usually when the word "Daytona" is slightly elevated above the center sub-dial, unlike on these earlier Daytonas that sometimes had the word on the upper portion of the dial. The word was big on some dials, and small on others.




Buying off of eBay is a big risk, even for the most educated of vintage Rolex hobbyist. I just wouldn't do it, especially with such a high-priced item.

If you're truly in the market for a four-digit Daytona, I'd spend a couple of dozen hours reading about them and studying dials, bezels, cases, movements, variations, etc ... That's part of the fun anyway, and then you could compare any potential watch purchase with good known examples. Check out the archives on HQ Milton, Sheartime, and other dealers. That's where I'd start.


Agree with swish77 about eBay risk on a big ticket and often faked or pieced together item such as a vintage Daytona. Also good advice about the research and thrill of the hunt fun.

Regarding the dial nomenclature, I too think “floating” was more often used to describe the 6263 reference among the 4 series, where some big red dials had the Daytona script elevated away from the lower sub-dial. For context, here’s a pic of the “big Daytona” dial signature, where the Daytona wording is larger and spaced. The dial text lines have a pyramid type effect on the big Daytona. The second pic shows the “floating Daytona” print on a 6263 for comparison.




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Old 20 March 2020, 02:33 AM   #14
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I've already discarded the ones shown above. Moving on to this one: Thanks again for the quick education and assistance.
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Old 20 March 2020, 03:52 AM   #15
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I'm seeing the dials on the 6239 models vary greatly and seem to bleed over from version to version. I figured there'd by dozens of eager Daytona fans here. Some articles I read show the "Daytona" above center started in late 64 and some say 65. There was big and little font...different spacing. Yikes. Can anyone here say with certainty that the above dial is correct for a 1964, serial 1,0x,xxx?

The term "floating" I am finding usually refers to the DAYTONA above the center, but it's all new to me.

And I'll put this out there: I'm not listing it for sale, but I have a very, very sweet 2998, as pretty as you'll ever see, that I am willing to trade for a nice 6239 or other pre 90s Daytona. If you find yourself old Daytona rich and like the best Speedmasters made, message me.
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Old 20 March 2020, 04:27 AM   #16
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Rolex did not do things by model year or serial number.

When they ordered dials, these went into inventory along with any others there, and were used as a builder grabbed one from stock.

Almost anything Rolex can be "dated" within a year or two, or within an era, but not to a precise day in time.
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Old 20 March 2020, 04:40 AM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swish77 View Post
The reference to "floating" is usually when the word "Daytona" is slightly elevated above the center sub-dial, unlike on these earlier Daytonas that sometimes had the word on the upper portion of the dial. The word was big on some dials, and small on others.
Thanks for that explanation. I was confused because in this blogpost, "floating" is used to describe the OP dial where the "DAYTONA" is floating below "COSMOGRAPH".
https://www.phillips.com/article/307...ograph-daytona

Also in these listings:
https://www.craftandtailored.com/pro...oating-daytona
https://www.phillips.com/detail/rolex/CH080217/144
https://robertmaron.com/rolex-dayton...ial-steel.html
https://www.christies.com/lotfinder/...2-details.aspx
https://lunaroyster.com/product/1964...wiss-t-dial-2/
etc.
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Old 20 March 2020, 05:38 AM   #18
justthebezel
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Rolex did not do things by model year or serial number.

When they ordered dials, these went into inventory along with any others there, and were used as a builder grabbed one from stock.

Almost anything Rolex can be "dated" within a year or two, or within an era, but not to a precise day in time.
If only Speedmaster "experts" could grasp this very simple concept of parts spilling over from iteration to iteration as batches were used up and bins emptied. Once a couple of pseudo experts published a book after viewing a handful of samples and having access to a tiny bit of the tinier bit of Omega records available, everything in the book has become Speedmaster law. I may get to liking it over here in Rolex world. In the Omega forum about a third of all threads seem to be overt or covert attacks on Rolex owners. Another third is discussion of the weather, etc, and the last third is devoted to Omega watch discussion. Nearly once a day some tool will start a thread aimed at belittling Rolex owners, often outright insulting the owners of the watches when not blathering on about how Rolex is only whipping Omega because of marketing and owners who are too vain and brainless to know better. It's kinda sad.
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Old 20 March 2020, 05:40 AM   #19
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From my brief foray so far, "floating" is not that cut and dried. I'll have to wait and see which explanation is most "buoyant" and able to "rise to the top."
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Old 20 March 2020, 05:43 AM   #20
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From my brief foray so far, "floating" is not that cut and dried. I'll have to wait and see which explanation is most "buoyant" and able to "rise to the top."
There doesn't need to be 100% consensus on the terminology. You're buying a watch, not the nickname. And clearly floating is used to mean different things on different dials and references, with the commonality being separation of the text from other text or a sub-dial edge.

The point is that searching using this term can help you find comps for valuation or authentication.
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Old 20 March 2020, 06:10 AM   #21
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I was never concerned with consensus, so that's good. I was merely pointing out that there is NOT consensus. What term collectors attach to a given characteristic is of no value unless it creates confusion and missteps.
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Old 20 March 2020, 06:12 AM   #22
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Ya know, looks like that term is used for both style Daytona dials. Interesting.

I'm thinking that old lunaroyster listing is the same dial configuration as the OP's example. Super cool version of the early Daytona.
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Old 20 March 2020, 07:20 AM   #23
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No hard and fast rule I'm aware of on nomenclature and yes, "floating" can and has been used to describe the distance from a sub-dial as well as gap between text. On the 6239 example, small and large have also been descriptors to differentiate dials. Perhaps for clarity, it would be described as a floating 6239 as opposed to big Daytona or a floating big red 6263 reference in the other example. Then you also have the later 16520 floating cosmograph Zenith Daytona...
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