The Pre-A OP 6500 Series.
When Officine Panerai, as a new Vendome subsidiary and sister brand of Cartier (the Vendome group was later acquired by Richemont) re-entered the watch market in 1997, they took-off with a small series of Historical-only watches. All were Luminor Marinas and Luminors. To begin with, a series of together 1000 OP 6500 PAM 001, 002, 003, 004, 009 and 010 was planned. This series of watches started with serial number BB 970001. BB probably is a discriminatory letter code that otherwise has no meaning to me. 97 is a denominator for the year of birth of the new Officine Panerai company, but looses its year-related meaning afterwards, when the number 98 was reached. It is now an integral part of the serial number. The remaining four digits are a sequential production number.
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The oldest example I have seen is a 1997 PVD pre-A PAM 009 numbered BB 970007 – 0007/1000, fondly known as the Bond Panerai. It is only the seventh Vendome Panerai ever produced.
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[ picture #07: Example of an OP 6500 case back. Picture by Vanni Chiozzi. ]
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It is fairly easy to identify a pre-A watch of the first series. For OP 6500 pre-A's, the last four digits of the BB-number or serial number should equal the four digits of the millesimation number. The relationship between serial number (BB) and millesimation number (0XXX/1000) is always consistent and logical. This last principle holds true for all pre-A's.
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EG: OP 6500 – BB970001 = 0001/1000 or OP 6500 – BB970499 = 0499/1000.
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A Case for the Case.
I am not sure what the real difference is between the OP 6500 case reference and the later OP 6502 case reference. There is a rather cryptic comment by Angelo Bonati, CEO of Officine Panerai, dated September 2003: "The Luminor were sold in the Italian market. Concerning Luminor 400 cases were a part of stock of old OP and 600 were produced by our factory. In fact old Panerai cases show a little lack." Maybe OP 6500's are those 400 old stock cases, and the 600 OP 6502? It is possible because the last pre-Vendome watches, 5218-209 and 5218-210 had one long screw to hold each strap-end. The same configuration as the pre-A and regular A-watches. However, more than those 400 cases were used for OP 6500. At least, that would have been necessary to reach the production number of 500+ OP 6500 items.
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In any event, at the time when Cartier initiated the purchase of the watch division from the old Officine Panerai company, Panerai had scheduled a second run of 500 Luminors and Luminor Marinas. These watches were code numbered 5218-209 (150) and 5218-210 (350). Only twelve Luminors (with polished bridges) and a mere two Luminor Marinas were produced. "The completion of the supply was subsequently prevented by the sale of the watch division", states Col. Ing. Zei in his 2003 book "La Panerai di Firenze". According to Yves Odier "Coro, [ … ] the Florentine company under Pre-Vendome officially only produced a little amount of watch-cases 5218-209 & 5218-210 and I believe that they may have also produced some watch-cases for "Vendome" in the very early moment of the take over." Maybe the cases (or the contract) for the 500 never produced pre-Vendomes eventually found their way to the customer in an OP 6500 guise? If that holds true, maybe the same principle is valid for the T-SWISS-T dials?
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The agreement between the old Officine Panerai SpA. and Cartier led, among others, to a transfer of all things related to the watch division; workshop drawings, quality control documents, trade marks (among which the right to use the name "Officine Panerai" from then on, the old company was renamed Panerai Systemi SpA.) and patents and of the stock of watches. It was also agreed that the old Panerai was to advise on the design of new watch models for about two years. If you ever have the chance to visit Dirk in his beautiful home near Antwerp, in between the classy wines he pours, ask him to show you a 1995 business plan for the Slytech brand. Although this plan came to no avail because of the dubious nature of its initiator, there is a lot in there that resembles the introduction of the new Officine Panerai in 1997. Submersibles, GMT's, a PAM 021-ish watch, it is all there.
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As said, the straps were fixed to pre-A cases with one long screw, like it is done in today's Panerai watches. All strap screws and tubes were made of stainless steel. For PVD pre-A's, however, the screw-heads were blackened, not PVD treated. The rest of each screw was left untreated. The strap tubes appear to have the same blackened finish. All other outwardly visible screws were PVD treated, while the pin that holds the lever was in stainless steel. The case back was largely finished in machine polished stainless steel. Besides the case reference, serial number, and matriculation number, case backs were stamped "OFFICINE PANERAI", "FIRENZE 1860", two dots, "STAINLESS STEEL", a fish symbol to denote underwater use and a maximum depth rating of "30 ATM". Real divers know of course that 30 atmospheres is the equivalent of a depth of only 290 meters, rather than 300 meters. At sea level, ambient pressure already is 1 atmosphere. For OP 6502 PVD pre-A's from the later series, the same configurations as above apply.
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[ picture #08: Pre-A screws and tubes. ]
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[ picture #09: Empty case. ]
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The Curse of the White Dial.
For a long time it was thought that no white dialed T SWISS MADE T OP 6500 pre-A's had been made, but then an OP 6500 pre-A PAM 003 surfaced in California in late 2004. Because these are so rare, when this watch emerged, it was thought that it was a prototype. Or a test watch, even though it had no shadow case. Thus far I have not seen an OP 6500 PAM 010 Luminor, a watch that given the above find, logically should exist too.
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Of all pre-A watches, those with white T SWISS MADE T dials command the lowest prices. Surely not having a T-SWISS-T dial is the main cause of that. Not having this pre-Vendome style dial, there are no directly visible differences between a pre-A PAM 003 and a regular A or B-series T SWISS MADE T dialed PAM 003. That said, the pre-A straps and sewn-in buckles -all in good condition- are collectors' items in their own right. So that is a premium over a regular A- or B-series white dialed watch. You can further add some extra value for the old style boxes and for the joy and exclusivity of having a real pre-A.
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[ picture #10: White dial pre-A next to a pre-Vendome Daylight – different dial lay-out. Picture by Hiro-san and Markus Tschopp.]
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Enter the Pre-A Mare Nostrum.
Somewhere in between those 1000 watches came a little less than 400 OP 6501 42 millimeter PAM 006, 007 and 008 Mare Nostrum chronograph watches. When Vendome took-over, 398 Mare Nostrum had been lying unsold in the vaults of the old company. These were altered and re-sold as the Vendome Mare Nostrum and were given a new dial, a new bezel, a new case back and a new strap and buckle. They came, however, in the original pre-Vendome mahogany, and later burl wood box.
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I believe Mare Nostrums should be considered pre-A too which, by the way, makes life a lot easier. Like its pre-A Luminor and Luminor Marina sisters, the Vendome Mare Nostrum has a T-SWISS-T dial. Unlike the 44 pre-A's, however, this specific dial does not at all resemble the pre-Vendome 5218-301/A Mare Nostrum dial. The Vendome dial lay-out is completely different from the older, slate blue design and came in three colours. The blue dialed PAM 006, the white dialed PAM 007 and the black dialed PAM 008, produced only in 1997.
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[ picture #11: Vendome Mare Nostrum T-SWISS-T next to pre-Vendome 5218-301/A. Picture by William Loi. ]
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[ picture #12: Close-up of T-SWISS-T. Picture by Nick. ]
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For the Mare Nostrum the adventure stopped after these 398 watches. My guess is that they were hard to sell. As late as 2003 it was still possible to find a new in box pre-Vendome Mare Nostrum at the Bottega d'Arte Panerai Boutique in Firenze. Even though hard to sell at the time, there are persistent rumours that a Mare Nostrum style chronograph is about to re-appear in the coming years. The fact that a pre-Vendome 5218-302/A Slytech Mare Nostrum is pictured prominently in Officine Panerai's 2005 catalogue may well be a precursor of its upcoming rebirth, though it might just as well be that is was put forward to create a historical back-drop for the new Slytech-series of large chronographs. No matter what will happen, there has been a steady rise in the popularity of both the pre-Vendome and Vendome Mare Nostrum these days.
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The Pre-A OP 6502 Series. |