Editorial
The Yacht-Master 42 in white gold is the top of the Yacht-Master hierarchy: 42mm of 18k white gold paired with a black Cerachrom bezel and Oysterflex rubber bracelet, a combination that reads as sport luxury without apology. It is the reference serious collectors point to when they want a Rolex that makes a clear statement about materials rather than a historical lineage.
The 226659 launched in 2019 as a successor to the 116689, bringing the caliber 3235 in place of the older 3135 and adopting the bidirectional rotatable black ceramic bezel that replaced white gold with a more scratch-resistant Cerachrom insert. The Oysterflex bracelet, introduced across the Yacht-Master line in 2015, became standard on this reference from launch. Dial options at introduction were limited; the rhodium-toned sunray dial with applied hour markers has remained the primary configuration through the current production run.
Check the bezel rotation: the bidirectional mechanism should engage cleanly with no slop or grinding, and the ceramic insert should show no chips at the 60-minute triangle marker, which is the most exposed point. The Oysterflex bracelet is proprietary and expensive to replace; inspect the clasp for wear and the blade interior for cracks at the flex points. White gold cases scratch less visibly than yellow or Everose gold but over-polishing still blunts the lug chamfers, so prefer examples with original brushed and polished surfaces intact.
Confirm the reference on the caseback and rehaut matches 226659, not the prior 116689, as the caliber and bracelet differ between the two.