Editorial
The 126334 is the Rolesor configuration of the current Datejust 41, pairing a steel case with white gold fluted bezel and Oyster bracelet in a two-tone format that sits clearly above the all-steel 126300 without crossing into full precious-metal territory. It runs the caliber 3235, making it one of the more technically capable movements in the Datejust lineup. Collectors who want the fluted bezel look with restraint land here.
The 126334 launched in 2016 as part of Rolex's consolidation of the Datejust line around the 41mm case, replacing the earlier 116334 which ran the caliber 3135. The shift to 3235 brought the Chronergy escapement, improved power reserve (approximately 70 hours), and greater shock resistance. Dial variants have included sunray-finish options in slate, white, black, and champagne, as well as several Motif dial configurations; dial count has expanded quietly over the production run.
The fluted white gold bezel is fixed to the steel case via Rolesor construction, with white gold also used on the crown and certain bracelet elements.
Check that the bezel is white gold and not a polished steel replacement; the white gold has a warmer, slightly softer sheen that is visually distinct under direct light. Inspect the case for over-polishing around the lug chamfers and the bezel seat, where two-tone cases tend to get aggressive buffing during amateur service. Verify the dial variant matches the papers, as the 126334 has enough dial configurations that mismatched documentation is not rare.
Prefer examples with the original Oyster bracelet; aftermarket bracelets in the two-tone configuration are common and reduce resale appeal. Service records from Rolex or a qualified independent matter more here than on all-steel variants because the white gold components complicate non-specialist work.