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The reference 6265 stands at the heart of the vintage Daytona story. Introduced in 1971 alongside the reference 6263, it marked the mature phase of the manual-winding Cosmograph, bringing together the metal tachymeter bezel lineage with screw-down chronograph pushers and the upgraded calibre 727. Hodinkee places the 6265 as the steel-bezel successor to earlier metal-bezel Daytonas and as part of the final long-running manual Daytona generation that remained in production until 1988. In collector terms, it is one of the foundational four-digit Daytonas: historically important, mechanically serious, and endlessly nuanced in its dial variations.
What distinguishes the present watch is its black Sigma dial, one of the quieter yet most appreciated configurations of the period. As Christie’s explains, the Sigma marks flanking the tritium signature at 6 o’clock indicate the use of gold for the applied hour markers and hands — in this case, white gold. Hodinkee similarly notes that Sigma dials were part of a broader 1970s dial landscape in which pre-Sigma, Sigma, and Big Red configurations often overlapped rather than appearing in strict sequence. That subtlety is precisely what gives the best 1970s Daytonas their lasting fascination: the most compelling examples are often defined not by loud visual differences, but by small, highly meaningful details.
The Sigma signature adds a level of refinement beneath the watch’s otherwise resolutely sporting exterior. Hairspring describes the Sigma dial 6265 as one of the “quieter” four-digit Daytonas and one of the more quietly excellent, noting that its appeal lies in restraint rather than theatricality. That reading is especially apt here: the black dial, steel bezel, Oyster case, and monochrome palette give the watch a disciplined, almost austere presence, while the Sigma detail rewards closer attention from the informed collector.
At its heart is the manual-winding Rolex calibre 727, the robust chronograph movement that defined the final generation of hand-wound Daytonas. Within the 6263/6265 family, the calibre 727 reinforced the Oyster identity of the model, accompanying the shift from pump pushers to screw-down pushers and consolidating the Daytona’s status as a more functionally complete sports chronograph. Italian Watch Spotter also notes that the 6265 became one of the richest four-digit Daytona references in terms of dial variation, helping explain why collectors continue to study the reference so closely today.
Presented on its stainless steel Rolex Oyster bracelet with deployant clasp, this circa 1975 example offers exactly the kind of combination that collectors value most: a historically important reference, an appreciated dial configuration, and the discreet sophistication that distinguishes strong vintage Rolex from the merely well known. For the collector drawn to substance over noise, this is a Daytona of real depth — restrained, correct in spirit, and anchored in one of the most compelling periods of manual-wind Daytona production.
Brand: Rolex
Model: Daytona
Reference: 6265
Case number: 3’976’XXX
Year: Circa 1975
Case material: Stainless steel
Case diameter: 37.5 mm
Casebacks: Screw back
Dial: Black Sigma dial
Movement: Manual-winding, calibre 727
Functions: Hours, minutes, small seconds, chronograph
Bracelet: Stainless steel Rolex Oyster bracelet with deployant clasp, overall length approximately 190 mm
Delivered with: Watch only
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