Editorial
The Ronde Solo is Cartier distilled to its essentials: a round case, Roman numerals, and nothing else asking for your attention. At 36mm it sits smaller than most modern dress watches, which is exactly the point. If you want Cartier at its most honest, this is the reference.
Cartier introduced the Ronde Solo in 2006 as a deliberately stripped-down entry into its contemporary collection, anchored by the in-house 1917 MC manual-wind movement. The round case form traces directly to Cartier's twentieth-century dress watches, and the design team made no attempt to update it. That conservatism is the entire statement.
The dial is pure: blued steel sword hands, Roman numerals in Cartier's characteristic typeface, a subtle railway-track minute ring at the perimeter, and a sapphire cabochon crown. In a catalog full of complication watches and celebrity collaborations, the Ronde Solo has held its position as the brand's plainest and most accessible current production piece.
The W6700455 is steel with a white dial, and the most common complaint is that this combination photographs as unremarkable next to flashier references, which means pre-owned prices can be softer than condition warrants. Bracelet wear is worth inspecting carefully: the integrated steel bracelet on this reference stretches over time and stretched links are difficult to source independently. Manual winding requires daily attention; buyers used to automatics sometimes find the discipline inconvenient and sell early, which supplies the pre-owned market with relatively low-mileage examples.
Verify that the crown is genuine Cartier issue with the cabochon intact, as aftermarket crowns circulate on grey market pieces. Service intervals on the 1917 MC are not demanding, but skipped services show up as worn mainspring behavior more quickly on a manual movement than on a rotor-wound one.