(Photo credit: Rolex)
When Rolex pulls back the curtain on its new releases each spring at Watches and Wonders, the dial tends to get most of the attention.
After all, it is the most visible change, from the Datejust’s ombré finishes to the Daytona’s enamel dial, the light-green aventurine dial of the Day-Date, and the colorful Oyster Perpetual. But just a year after introducing its Dynapulse escapement, a revolutionary innovation that moves away from the traditional Swiss lever system, Rolex has unveiled its most complex caliber yet, a reminder that the brand remains, at its core, a watchmaker.
“We could have rested on our laurels,” a Rolex representative told me, referring to the release of the brand’s newest caliber, Caliber 4162, now powering the new Yacht-Master II. It introduces a function unique to Rolex: a programmable countdown with mechanical memory that can be synchronized on the fly. In another first, the countdown minutes and seconds hands rotate counterclockwise, making it immediately clear that time is ticking down to zero. The countdown is now set using the lower pusher rather than the rotatable bezel and Ring Command system found on the prior model.
In an industry that often leans on nostalgia, Rolex’s recent releases are the latest sign it is still a leading innovator in mechanical movements, competing at the highest level in engineering.