Editorial
The Calibre de Cartier was Cartier's answer to collector skepticism: a round, sport-dressed men's watch powered by a movement they designed and built themselves. It arrived in 2010 with the 1904 PS MC, the first Cartier-developed automatic for their mainstream line, and it changed how the market read the brand. Forty-two millimeters of steel, a sapphire caseback, and genuine manufacture credibility at a price that undercuts most Swiss rivals.
Before the Calibre, Cartier was widely viewed as a jeweler that bought movements off the shelf. The 2010 launch was a deliberate rebuttal: the 1904 PS MC was developed in-house at Cartier's La Chaux-de-Fonds facilities and offered a level of finishing and specification that matched independent watchmakers rather than pure fashion houses. The 42mm round case was a conscious break from the brand's usual rectangular vocabulary, aimed squarely at collectors who wanted a dressy sport watch with a wearable modern diameter.
The visible movement through the caseback gave buyers something to point to, which mattered as much for marketing as it did for horology. The Calibre ran continuously through the 2010s and established a foundation for every subsequent Cartier manufacture reference.
The W7100055 is a steel reference with no complications, which keeps the value proposition clear but also means there is no floor under resale prices the way complications tend to provide. Early examples occasionally surface with worn crown tubes, a known friction point on the Calibre case that costs more to address than buyers expect. The sapphire caseback gasket should be inspected at service; many pre-owned examples have had the caseback removed and refitted without the proper tool, leaving micro-damage to the case threads.
Dial condition is generally stable but the applied indices can show adhesive yellowing on pieces that were stored in high humidity. Confirm the bracelet end-links are original: aftermarket replacements are common and noticeably degrade the fit.