Editorial
The 116500LN is the first steel Daytona to wear a ceramic bezel, a significant engineering change that also coincided with the switch to the in-house caliber 4130. It arrived in 2016 to extraordinary demand, and grey-market premiums ran well above retail for the entirety of its production life, making it one of the most talked-about steel sport watches of its era.
Rolex introduced the 116500LN in 2016, replacing the aluminium-bezel 116520 and debuting the Oysterflex bracelet option alongside the steel bracelet variant. The caliber 4130, introduced in 2000, carries over from the 116520 but was paired here for the first time with a ceramic bezel insert in black or white. Dials ship in two configurations: the panda (white dial, black subdials) and the reverse-panda (black dial, white subdials).
Both are printed with a tachymetre scale on the ceramic bezel rather than the chapter ring of earlier references. Production ran through 2023, when the reference was superseded by the 126500LN with a larger 40mm case redesign and updated bracelet geometry.
Check the ceramic bezel closely for chips at the edges, particularly around the tachymetre markers, as ceramic is brittle and a damaged bezel is costly to replace at an authorised service centre. On the dial, look at the subdial printing under magnification; fading or uneven lacquer is rare but does appear on watches that have seen UV exposure. Inspect the bracelet endlinks and clasp for stretch and verify the bracelet reference matches the production era.
The case finishing on used examples varies widely; prefer a watch where the brushed and polished surfaces are still crisply differentiated rather than uniformly polished over. Service history matters less on younger examples but ask for purchase receipts or papers to confirm the watch was acquired through a legitimate channel given the waitlist climate around this reference.