Rolex

16528, Daytona, 'Floating Cosmograph' Gold Dial, Yellow Gold

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$87,000.00
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$87,000.00
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A ref. 16528 Daytona with a rare 'Floating Cosmograph' Gold Dial. 'Floating Cosmograph' dials were only in production for the very first two years of Zenith Daytona manufacturing, accounting for less than 10% of all dials. The 16528 is the most luxurious Zenith Daytona made, thanks in no small part to rarity. Most estimates place 1 yellow gold ref. 16528 for every 18-25 examples of the steel ref. 16520, rarer by a factor of 20x. Perfectly preserved, this is a collector's Zenith Daytona: the first chapter, printed slightly off-center.

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Worth Reading

Before ceramic bezels, waitlists, and infinite hype, there was this. An early Zenith-era Daytona, in solid yellow gold, with just enough oddity to make it irresistible. The Rolex 16528 with a ‘Floating Cosmograph’ dial is not your typical Daytona, not for the masses, and distinguished by details to mark it out as a masterpiece to those who can recognize it. A hallmark of the very beginning of the self-wound Zenith Daytona, ‘Floating Cosmograph’ dials are particularly rare in gold. Perhaps a period Rolex ad featuring a gold dial 16528 put it best, ‘For those who are extremely driven. But also like to drive.’

At debut in 1988 the Zenith Daytona fundamentally and permanently altered the trajectory of the model, taking a languishing and out-of-date manual chronograph right to the bleeding technical edge. Rolex made over 200 modifications to the calibre 4030, resulting in a thoroughbred chronograph. The case was far more contemporary, 40mm over 37mm. The 16520 family ushered in the modern Daytona era—but the yellow gold 16528 took that revolution and created a wholly luxurious object with weight, warmth, and rarity. For context, most estimates place 1 yellow gold ref. 16528 for every 18-25 examples of the steel ref. 16520, rarer by a factor of 20x.

In the first two years of production, dials featured a typographic anomaly known simply as the ‘Floating’ dial to most, where the word Cosmograph is detached from the lines above, suspended and floating. The look is unmistakably transition to those who study Daytona, and still made by Singer. Floating dials are estimated to account for less than 10% of 16528 production. While nothing is known concretely, the gold floating dial is one of the rarest variants of 16528 and often sought after by serious collectors. Some collectors refer to this exact configuration as the Angelo Parrilla, as F1 driver Ayrton Senna gifted a ‘Floating’ gold dial 16528 just like this example to his early mentor, Mr. Parrilla. 

The 16528 is a classic from another time, the last of the traditional ébauche Daytona with immense refinement. While vintage by definition, it was far ahead enough of its time to not feel dated whatsoever today—only elegant. For the collector who knows, this isn’t just an early automatic Daytona. It’s the first chapter, printed slightly off-center.

Condition

This 16528 presents in excellent overall condition. The case is remarkably sharp, likely never worked on. The bezel edge is well defined, its lug profile is perfectly sharp top and bottom, and the hallmarks are deep. There is light surface wear on nearly all surfaces. Its dial shows no signs of damage or marks. The tritium has aged to a light tan tone that comes very close to perfectly matching the dial. The calibre 4030 is running well in specification on our timing equipment.

Specifications

This example is modelled on an average-sized 7-inch wrist.

  • Brand: Rolex
  • Model: Daytona
  • Reference: 16528
  • Size: 40
  • Year: 1988
  • Case Material: 18k Yellow Gold
  • Movement: Automatic Calibre 4030
  • Scope: Watch Only