The Watch
The Monclaire Guide The Watch
The Designation
Rolex Lady-Datejust $7,200+ (steel)
Rolex refused to offer women lesser engineering.
The Lady-Datejust runs Caliber 2236: self-winding, entirely developed and manufactured in-house, the same Superlative Chronometer certification applied to men's references. The Syloxi hairspring — silicon, paramagnetic, temperature-stable — oscillates at 28,800 vibrations per hour. Fifty-five-hour power reserve. Accuracy after casing: -2/+2 seconds per day.
This is not a compromise. It's the same engineering philosophy applied to a 28mm case. The Datejust 31 offers the same caliber larger. The Datejust 36 — now the gender-neutral standard — runs Caliber 3235 with 70-hour power reserve.
A Rolex, purchased new and properly maintained, retains approximately 107% of its value. A watchmaker in 2085 can service a mechanical Rolex from 1960.
The watch treats the buyer as a collector.
Designated.
Did Not Pass
Several houses offered quartz movements at five-figure prices. Others steered women toward jewelry cases when they asked about complications. Some reserved mechanical calibers for men's references only. The Dossier holds the full account.
Forty-seven watches examined. One admitted.
Brand referenced:
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