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The Cellini Time 50505 is Rolex's current dress watch in the modern Cellini lineup, a 39mm white gold case on leather strap with guilloché dial options and the anti-magnetic caliber 3132 inside. It occupies a narrow position in the catalog: a precious-metal dress watch from a brand whose identity is defined by sport references, which makes it genuinely rare in the wild and quietly interesting to collectors who want something from Rolex that most people don't recognize on sight.
The 50505 launched in 2014 as part of the fully redesigned Cellini collection that replaced the older, fragmented Cellini lines with a coherent family sharing the same case architecture. The ref brought in caliber 3132, an evolution of the 3130 base adding a Parachrom hairspring for anti-magnetic and shock resistance improvements. Dial options at launch included silver, ivory, and black guilloche patterns with applied Roman or baton indices; the guilloché sunburst dials with lacquered finish are the most visually distinct variants.
No major case or dial redesign has occurred since introduction; the reference has remained stable through the current production run.
Check the dial for condition carefully, as the guilloche texture shows scuffs and improper cleaning in a way that flat dials do not; originality is hard to fake but damage is easy to overlook in photos. The white gold case should show crisp anglage on the lugs; white gold is softer than steel and polishes out faster, so over-buffed examples are common. Confirm the strap is original Rolex-supplied leather, as replacements are frequently swapped without disclosure.
Prefer examples with full box and papers, particularly the warranty card, since the 50505 is thin-traded enough that provenance materially affects resale. Service history from an authorized service center matters more here than on a steel sport reference because movement originality is harder for a general buyer to verify on a precious-metal watch.
The 50505 trades well below its retail price on the secondary market, which is typical for non-sport Rolex references; buyer demand is a fraction of what the steel sport catalog sees. Guilloché dial examples in ivory or silver with full set documentation hold better than incomplete examples. White gold means the watch carries intrinsic metal value as a floor, but that floor is not always reflected in secondary pricing given thin liquidity.
Pricing has been stable rather than appreciating; this is a watch to buy because you want to wear it, not for value trajectory.
Caliber 3132 is well-supported at both Rolex service centers and independent watchmakers familiar with the 3130 family. Service intervals of 7 to 10 years are standard. A documented service from a Rolex authorized service center adds credibility on resale in a way that matters more for a precious-metal dress watch than for a beater sport reference.
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Cal. 3132 through the exhibition caseback is the movement check; dial and bezel originality matter more than scarcity.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | White enamel or sunray silver dial surface | Uniform sunray finish or smooth white enamel with consistent Rolex printing at 12 | Any matte finish, visible grain inconsistency, or reprint artifacts under loupe |
| case | Fluted bezel in 18k white gold | Sharp, uniform fluting with consistent metal color throughout; no wear flattening on tips | Flattened or unevenly spaced fluting; color mismatch between bezel and case metal |
| caseback | Cal. 3132 identification | Cal. 3132 visible through exhibition caseback; no rotor covers the movement center | Different caliber number engraved on movement; rotor architecture inconsistent with Cal. 3132 |