Key Highlights
- 42mm solid 17-piece Grade 5 titanium case, water-resistant to 10 bar
- Retrograde minute, jumping digital hour at 12 o’clock, and small seconds at 6 o’clock
- Hand-guillochéd silver galvanic upper dial and blue CVD-coated curved subdial, finished at the Atelier Lucerne
- Manufacture calibre C.6004 — automatic, 55-hour power reserve, skeletonised tungsten rotor
- Strictly limited to 50 pieces; reference CH-1423T.1-BKSI

What You Need to Know
The Chronoswiss Delphis Glacier is a 50-piece limited edition in Grade 5 titanium, priced for collectors who prioritise finishing quality and mechanical originality over brand recognition alone. Its reference is CH-1423T.1-BKSI. The edition is closed at fifty units worldwide.
Chronoswiss positions the Glacier as an extension of the broader Delphis Art Deco family, a line the Lucerne-based manufacture has used to explore both architectural dial construction and unconventional display complications. Where some Delphis variants lean into warm, classical aesthetics, the Glacier makes an unambiguous turn toward monochromatic restraint. The pairing of natural titanium with a black rubber strap reads less as sporty and more as deliberately austere, which at this level of hand-finishing is a considered editorial choice rather than a concession to casual wear.
Design & Materials
The 42mm case is solid titanium, machined in 17 parts, with a polished bezel, a side-fluted decorative ring, and a cambered double anti-reflective sapphire crystal. At 14.5mm in height the proportions are substantial, though titanium’s low density ensures the watch remains comfortable across extended wear.
The dial is where the Glacier genuinely earns its name. The upper level — home to the digital hour aperture — is silver galvanic and hand-guillochéd with a curved surface whose texture evokes the compressed crystalline structure of glacial ice. The subdial at 6 o’clock, a curved form Chronoswiss describes as a UFO, is finished with a blue CVD coating and its own layer of hand-guillochéd decoration. Both surfaces are produced entirely within the Atelier Lucerne. The Viking-profile brass gold-plated hands and the rhodium-plated diamond-cut Feuille seconds hand add a subtle contrast of warmth and cold that prevents the composition from feeling flat. Ceramic indexes complete the dial architecture without introducing any material that would compromise the overall restraint.

Movement & Mechanical Character
Calibre C.6004 is a Chronoswiss manufacture automatic movement, 33mm in diameter, with 37 jewels and a Glucydur three-legged balance paired with a Nivarox 1 balance spring. Fine regulation is achieved via an excenter, and Incabloc shock protection is standard. The frequency sits at 4 Hz, with a power reserve of approximately 55 hours.
The finishing specification for a 50-piece edition at this price tier is worth noting in detail. The escape wheel, armature, and screws are individually polished. The bridge carries a Geneva cut and is ruthenium-plated. The rotor is skeletonised and made from tungsten, mounted on ball bearings. Chronoswiss has long used the Neo Digiteur Chronos and related platforms to demonstrate that digital and retrograde displays can coexist with serious movement craft, and the C.6004 continues that argument. The complication set — retrograde central minute, jumping digital hour, analogue small seconds — demands precise coordination between three independent display mechanisms, all resolved within a 14.5mm case height.

Why Collectors Care
Fifty pieces is a production ceiling that commands attention. At that volume, secondary market scarcity is structural rather than speculative, and the hand-finishing credentials — atelier-executed guillochéd work on both the upper dial and the subdial — give the Glacier a provenance argument that purely industrial competitors cannot replicate.
The Pulse GMT Silver Guilloche demonstrated Chronoswiss’s ability to carry guilloché work across a contemporary case format without sacrificing legibility. The Glacier takes that same craft commitment into a more technically complex display architecture. For GCC collectors building around mechanical originality rather than marque prestige, the combination of a rare complication, hand-executed dial surfaces, and a production run of fifty gives this piece a defensible place in any serious collection.


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Frequently Asked Questions
What movement powers the Chronoswiss Delphis Glacier?
The Delphis Glacier is powered by the Chronoswiss manufacture calibre C.6004, an automatic movement with a 33mm diameter, 37 jewels, and a frequency of 4 Hz (28,800 A/h). It offers approximately 55 hours of power reserve and features a skeletonised tungsten rotor on ball bearings.
How many pieces of the Delphis Glacier are produced?
The Delphis Glacier is strictly limited to 50 pieces, each bearing the reference CH-1423T.1-BKSI.
What complications does the Delphis Glacier display?
The watch features a digital jumping hour at 12 o'clock, a central retrograde minute hand, and an analogue small seconds subdial at 6 o'clock — a combination Chronoswiss calls the retrograde minute and jumping hour complication.
What case material and size does the Delphis Glacier use?
The case is a solid 17-piece Grade 5 titanium construction measuring 42mm in diameter and 14.5mm in height, water-resistant to 10 bar (100 metres), and fitted with a black rubber strap via Chronoswiss's patented autobloc screw-down system.
What makes the Delphis Glacier dial distinctive?
The dial is a three-dimensional construction featuring a hand-guillochéd silver galvanic upper level for the hour display and a curved UFO-shaped subdial finished with a blue CVD coating and hand-guillochéd decoration, both executed at the Atelier Lucerne.



