Editorial
The Santos-Dumont XL is the large rectangular Santos in its truest form: manual-wind, steel, 47mm, and built to recall the proportions of the 1904 original. There is no automatic rotor adding bulk, no complications diluting the idea. Just a flat, clean rectangle you wear on your wrist because Alberto Santos-Dumont needed to read the time with both hands on the controls.
In 1904, Louis Cartier made a wristwatch for his friend Alberto Santos-Dumont, the Brazilian aviator who was then astonishing Paris by flying powered aircraft over the Bois de Boulogne. Santos-Dumont could not check a pocket watch mid-flight, so Cartier strapped a watch to his wrist. That makes the Santos the first purpose-built men's wristwatch on record, not a converted brooch or a military affectation.
The WSSA0032 revisits the original brief: large, flat, rectangular, and hand-wound, the shape that started the category. Cartier introduced the modern Santos-Dumont XL in 2018 as a conscious step away from the sportier, automatic Santos de Cartier line. It sits apart in the catalog for collectors who want the historical version, not the contemporary sport interpretation.
The 47mm length sounds imposing but is a rectangular case, so wrist presence reads differently than a 47mm round watch. Measure your wrist and consider the lug-to-lug fit before assuming it is too large. The manual-wind 1611 MC requires daily winding; if you wear the watch intermittently you will reset the time more often than an automatic wearer expects.
Early WSSA0032 examples from 2018 and 2019 were produced with a synthetic strap only; later examples added more strap options at purchase. The flat case means crystal replacement on a knocking or scuffed watch will be a recurring service cost, so inspect the crystal carefully on any pre-owned piece. Verify the caseback seal and crown tube condition on secondhand examples, as the rectangular case makes resealing more labor-intensive than a round case.