Rolex D blue discontinued
Rolex D blue discontinued
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Discussion

hosedoctor

Original Poster:

664 posts

240 months

Sunday 28th February 2016
quotequote all
Just been looking at a few adverts on the web and the amount of them saying about the D blue being discontinued,clever bit of advertising but how much truth is there in it? It's probably Rolex that starts it! LOL

WatchMajor

92 posts

139 months

Sunday 28th February 2016
quotequote all
Not true, I say not true in that its just another internet rumour that benefits everyone less someone about to buy

hosedoctor

Original Poster:

664 posts

240 months

Sunday 28th February 2016
quotequote all
Lol I did think that! The crafty f*****s!

13m

28,176 posts

245 months

Sunday 28th February 2016
quotequote all
WatchMajor said:
Not true, I say not true in that its just another internet rumour that benefits everyone less someone about to buy
Does anyone care? It's a gopping piece of nonsense.

WatchMajor

92 posts

139 months

Monday 29th February 2016
quotequote all
13m said:
Does anyone care? It's a gopping piece of nonsense.
Im in the watch trade and we really like it but taste is personal

13m

28,176 posts

245 months

Monday 29th February 2016
quotequote all
WatchMajor said:
13m said:
Does anyone care? It's a gopping piece of nonsense.
Im in the watch trade and we really like it but taste is personal
You really like it because?

bobbybee

880 posts

177 months

Monday 29th February 2016
quotequote all
Classic design, great engineering. But for me way too big and top heavy.

13m

28,176 posts

245 months

Monday 29th February 2016
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bobbybee said:
Classic design, great engineering. But for me way too big and top heavy.
That's basically my problem with it.

The Deepsea never floated my boat and they seemed to hang about at ADs. The change of dial colour may have addressed the second point, but doesn't change my opinion.

Blown2CV

30,838 posts

226 months

Tuesday 1st March 2016
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the D-Blue will be discontinued at some point as it's a special edition of the Deepsea.

ExplorerII

279 posts

157 months

Tuesday 1st March 2016
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Blown2CV said:
the D-Blue will be discontinued at some point as it's a special edition of the Deepsea.
Dream on. No sooner than any other reference of Rolex. fk knows why they're so expensive compared to the default version. I read an interesting article of a saturation diver who's Deepsea steamed up whilst submerged down to a relatively shallow depth for this reference. Needless to say I won't be buying one anytime soon.

Blown2CV

30,838 posts

226 months

Tuesday 1st March 2016
quotequote all
ExplorerII said:
Blown2CV said:
the D-Blue will be discontinued at some point as it's a special edition of the Deepsea.
fk knows why they're so expensive compared to the default version.
..... because it's a special edition?

bobbybee

880 posts

177 months

Tuesday 1st March 2016
quotequote all
ExplorerII said:
Dream on. No sooner than any other reference of Rolex. fk knows why they're so expensive compared to the default version. I read an interesting article of a saturation diver who's Deepsea steamed up whilst submerged down to a relatively shallow depth for this reference. Needless to say I won't be buying one anytime soon.
Oh no one watch had a slight bit of condensation They must ALL be rubbish!
Going from warm air into the cold sea. It happens, it clears up, the watch is OK.

the D-Blue is a special edition, which commemorates James Cameron's solo dive to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, as with any special edition watch they cost more. Also quite rare for Rolex as they don't make special editions often.

13m

28,176 posts

245 months

Tuesday 1st March 2016
quotequote all
bobbybee said:
ExplorerII said:
Dream on. No sooner than any other reference of Rolex. fk knows why they're so expensive compared to the default version. I read an interesting article of a saturation diver who's Deepsea steamed up whilst submerged down to a relatively shallow depth for this reference. Needless to say I won't be buying one anytime soon.
Oh no one watch had a slight bit of condensation They must ALL be rubbish!
Going from warm air into the cold sea. It happens, it clears up, the watch is OK.
Really? The only time I've ever had a watch steam up has been when it had a faulty seal.

bobbybee

880 posts

177 months

Tuesday 1st March 2016
quotequote all
13m said:
Really? The only time I've ever had a watch steam up has been when it had a faulty seal.
Yep, it can happen on any watch, it's the extremes in temp that make it happen. If you get that sort of thing at 'room temp' then it really needs looking at.
Or as you have said it can also be a sign that the seals have gone

ExplorerII

279 posts

157 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2016
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bobbybee said:
Oh no one watch had a slight bit of condensation They must ALL be rubbish!
Going from warm air into the cold sea. It happens, it clears up, the watch is OK.

the D-Blue is a special edition, which commemorates James Cameron's solo dive to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, as with any special edition watch they cost more. Also quite rare for Rolex as they don't make special editions often.
They had a shed load of unsold Deepsea's loitering so they removed the old black dial and replaced with a blue shade type and called it a special-edition. Rolex marketing at its best. I have a Sub 16610 Ref which is good enough for me.

And actually Bobby, the watch was not ok. Do you know the full story? Er. No.

Edited by ExplorerII on Wednesday 2nd March 20:29

Blown2CV

30,838 posts

226 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2016
quotequote all
ExplorerII said:
bobbybee said:
Oh no one watch had a slight bit of condensation They must ALL be rubbish!
Going from warm air into the cold sea. It happens, it clears up, the watch is OK.

the D-Blue is a special edition, which commemorates James Cameron's solo dive to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, as with any special edition watch they cost more. Also quite rare for Rolex as they don't make special editions often.
They had a shed load of unsold Deepsea's loitering so they removed the old black dial and replaced with a blue shade type and called it a special-edition. Rolex marketing at its best. I have a Sub 16610 Ref which is good enough for me.

And actually Bobby, the watch was not ok. Do you know the full story? Er. No.

Edited by ExplorerII on Wednesday 2nd March 20:29
i really don't think they created the special edition because they had built a massive excess of the standard edition. These aren't 1981 austin metros we are talking about here. Have you seen the DeepSea Challenge? (er no)

ExplorerII

279 posts

157 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2016
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See, I told you there were gullible people out there that believe the bullst.

Blown2CV

30,838 posts

226 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2016
quotequote all
ExplorerII said:
See, I told you there were gullible people out there that believe the bullst.
I'll ignore the attitude. Wouldn't buy one myself, although i do have a standard black-face DSSD.

ExplorerII

279 posts

157 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2016
quotequote all
And I prefer the Black Dial myself. But it is very true that there are lots of Deepsea's out there unsold and it was a way Of Rolex kick-starting the sales again. It was never a very popular reference with Rolex enthusiasts. It was the disk with the writing on it that pissed most off, and also the thickness and weight. I like it though.

ExplorerII

279 posts

157 months

Wednesday 2nd March 2016
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And Special Edition is by no means another name for Limited Edition. And you're quite right Bobby, they don't male special editions very often unless they need to shift old-stock.

Its the Dweller's 50th Anniversary next year so they might bang out another special edition. LMFAO
Edited by ExplorerII on Wednesday 2nd March 21:10



Edited by ExplorerII on Wednesday 2nd March 21:16