Rail Dial White Sea-Dweller 1665 | DRSD.com

White Sea-Dweller  ·  Model 1665  ·  Mark 2 Variant

Rail Dial
White Sea-Dweller

The Rail Dial Configuration of the White 1665 Sea-Dweller

Overview

The 1665 dials with the “Rail” are quite rare nowadays. Rail Dials were made by the Stern Company — the same firm that produced the 600 metres COMEX 1665 dials — and only for a two-year production window: 1977–79, in the 5 million serial range.

The text style and spacing of the “Rail” is the same as used on the 600 metre COMEX dials, giving the Rail Dial a distinctive typographic kinship with one of the most coveted variants in vintage Sea-Dweller collecting.

Rail Dial White Sea-Dweller 1665 overview

Rail Dial 1665 — Overview

Rail Dial White Sea-Dweller 1665 dial detail

Dial Detail

Rail Dial White 1665 — M. Pisani

Rail Dial — M. Pisani

Maker Stern Company (same as COMEX 1665 dials)
Production Period 1977–1979
Serial Range 5.7 million – 6.2 million
Rarity Quite rare — two-year window only
Serial  5.7M – 6.2M Production  1977–1979 Maker  Stern Co.

Distinctive Characteristics

Obviously, the alignment of the wording on the dial is lined up on a “rail” — hence the name. Six defining features set it apart from a standard White Sea-Dweller 1665:

  • 1 The “C” of Chronometer lines up with the “C” of Certified on the line below — the definitive “rail” alignment.
  • 2 The font of the depth markings is always in italics.
  • 3 The hour markers (tritium dots) are closer to the minute track than on the regular dial.
  • 4 The only version of the SD dials marked “T SWISS T <25”, shared with the COMEX 1665.
  • 5 Longer minute markers than the standard White Sea-Dweller.
  • 6 Serial range: 5.7 mil to 6.2 mil.
Dial Text Alignment

SUPERLATIVE
CHRONOMETER     OFFICIALLY     CERTIFIED

Glancing at the Rail Dial gives an instant impression of similarities to the COMEX 1665 dial. The comparison is not coincidental — both come from the same Stern Company production line.

Rail Dial vs. Normal White Sea-Dweller

Below is a comparison between the “Rail Dial 1665” and the normal White Sea-Dweller 1665. In the pictures you can clearly see the three items mentioned — the line-up of the “C” in a “Rail” configuration, the italics font of the depth markings, and the markers closer to the minute track.

Rail Dial 1665 vs Normal White Sea-Dweller comparison

Rail Dial vs. Normal White SD — Side by Side Comparison

Photos — Aston

On closer inspection, the Rail Dial also shares the same font style with the COMEX 1665. However, there are some points where the COMEX and the Rail Dial do not share characteristics:

Shared with COMEX 1665
T SWISS T <25 marking
Stern Company production
Font style (text)
Rail alignment of CHRONOMETER text
Not Shared with COMEX 1665
“Date” printing
600m / 610m depth markings
Shape of coronet

Additional Reference Photos

Rail Dial White Sea-Dweller 1665 detail

Rail Dial Detail — Photo 2

Rail Dial White Sea-Dweller 1665 detail

Rail Dial Detail — Photo 3

Photos — Aston

Collector Context

The COMEX Connection

Since most people don’t like to wear their COMEX watches for daily use — because of their collectibility and high value — the Rail Dial 1665 is a perfect substitution for everyday wear. The Rail Dial has a hidden story tied to the Stern Company and its relationship with COMEX. It is a kind of fun to imagine that this Rail Dial might have been sent to COMEX in the late 1970s.

The Double Red Sea-Dweller 1665s spiraled in popularity and value significantly in the years since this page was written, and the Rail Dials have followed — exactly as predicted. For the serious 1665 collector, the Rail Dial represents a rare and historically significant variant that bridges the gap between the standard White Sea-Dweller and the ultra-collectible COMEX examples.