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Detailed information on Concord Delirium Ultra-Thin
There are watches that tell time, and then there are watches that tell you exactly what era they were born in.
The vintage Concord Delirium (this name!) is pure late-1970s/early-1980s Swiss defiance: a luxury object engineered less for practicality than for the headlines. Quartz had changed the rules, Japan was dominating in efficiency, and Switzerland needed to prove it could still out-design and out-build the world. The answer was thinness—taken to an almost absurd extreme.
On January 12, 1979, Ebauches SA and ETA—alongside Concord, Eterna, IWC, and Longines—announced what was then the world’s thinnest watch. Measuring just 1.98mm thick, it was powered by the remarkable ESA Cal. 999, a movement constructed directly into the caseback. It was so slim it required the world’s smallest battery at the time, and famously lacked a traditional crown, relying instead on a caseback pusher for setting.
This Delirium is from the later chapter of the story: still exceptionally slim, but designed for daily wear and a more conventional user experience. It features a crisp rectangular gold case, a glossy black dial with Roman numerals, and the discreet QUARTZ signature that defines the era. A shiny black lizard strap and the original gold Concord pin buckle with CC logo complete the look. A flash of Delirium on the wrist and the gates to Studio 54 would have automatically opened.
And perhaps the best part: the Delirium’s case-integrated movement concept directly informed the early Swatch project—initially nicknamed “Delirium Vulgare,” or “Delirium for the masses.”
A fashion watch, a technical milestone, and a tiny piece of Swiss watchmaking’s survival story.