Guide explores history of Rolex Day-Date watch

The Rolex Day-Date, introduced in 1956, stands as the brand's premier precious-metal timepiece, featuring day and date displays. This model has been worn by numerous presidents and celebrities, earning its nickname from the distinctive President bracelet. A recent guide details its evolution across generations, from early automatic movements to modern innovations.

Rolex launched the Oyster Perpetual Day-Date in 1956 as the world's first automatic chronometer-certified wristwatch displaying the full day of the week at 12 o'clock and a magnified date at 3 o'clock. Available exclusively in precious metals like yellow gold, white gold, Everose gold, and platinum, it measures 36 mm in its classic form and uses the Jubilee or President bracelet. The day display supports 26 languages, catering to global markets.

Early references include the 6510 and 6511, with 36 mm yellow gold cases and the cal. 1055 automatic movement, though the latter had occasional date advancement issues resolved in the 1957 ref. 6611. This model introduced the President bracelet, featuring a pie-pan dial and dauphine hands. Production spanned from smooth and fluted bezels, with rare stainless steel prototypes noted but not serialized.

The 180X series, from around 1959 to 1977, retained the pie-pan dial and acrylic crystal, introducing baton hands and later hacking seconds with cal. 1555 or 1556. Transitioning to the 180XX in 1977 brought flat dials, sapphire crystals, and the cal. 3055 with quickset date and 48-hour reserve. Variants included diamond dials and smooth bezels.

In 1977, Rolex debuted the Oysterquartz 190XX series with cal. 5055, offering high accuracy in angular 36 mm cases until 2004. The 182XX from 1988 added double-quickset functionality via cal. 3155. The 118XXX series, starting 2000, featured engraved rehauts against counterfeits and introduced Everose gold in 2005, with movement precision updated to +/-2 seconds per day by 2015.

Larger variants emerged with the 41 mm Day-Date II in 2008 using cal. 3156, replaced by the 40 mm Day-Date 40 in 2015 with cal. 3255 innovations like Parachrom hairspring and 70-hour reserve. The current 36 mm 1282XX, from 2019, mirrors these advancements, including gem-set options like rainbow sapphires.

Secondary market prices start at $12,000 for vintage pieces, rising to over $44,200 for recent models. Celebrities such as LeBron James, John Mayer, and former presidents like Richard Nixon have popularized it as a status symbol.

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