NH35 vs SW200-1: Case Design Differences and Trade-Offs

The Seiko NH35 and Sellita SW200-1 are commonly used in modern watch cases.

They are often compared on:

  • cost
  • brand perception
  • specifications

Case design is driven by geometry and constraints.

These movements require fundamentally different approaches.


Nominal Dimensions

NH35

  • Diameter: 27.40 mm
  • Height: ~5.32 mm
  • Stem height: ~1.92 mm

SW200-1

  • Diameter: 25.60 mm
  • Height: 4.60 mm
  • Stem height: 1.80 mm

Differences are small in absolute terms.
They are significant in case design.


Case Diameter Impact

The NH35 requires a larger internal case diameter.

Implications:

  • increased case size
  • thicker walls or larger external dimensions
  • different proportions

SW200-1 allows:

  • more compact case geometry
  • thinner designs
  • tighter packaging

Case Thickness and Axial Stack

NH35 height increases total stack.

Effects:

  • thicker case required
  • increased sensitivity to hand clearance
  • higher crystal position

SW200-1 allows:

  • lower profile cases
  • tighter axial control
  • reduced stack height

Crown Position and Case Geometry

Stem height differs.

NH35:

  • higher stem position

SW200-1:

  • lower stem position

This affects:

  • crown tube location
  • case flank geometry
  • visual proportions

Using incorrect geometry results in:

  • misalignment
  • functional issues

Movement Retention Strategy

NH35 commonly uses:

  • spacer rings (often plastic)

Implications:

  • additional tolerance variation
  • dependency on spacer geometry

SW200-1 typically uses:

  • clamps or integrated features

Implications:

  • more direct control of positioning
  • reduced dependency on additional components

Tolerance Behaviour

NH35 systems often exhibit:

  • wider variation
  • less controlled fit (depending on components)

SW200-1 systems:

  • tighter tolerances
  • more consistent integration

Design implications:

  • NH requires more tolerance allowance
  • SW200-1 allows tighter control

Sealing and Compression

NH35:

  • larger axial stack increases sensitivity
  • sealing must account for greater variation

SW200-1:

  • more compact stack
  • easier to control compression range

Incorrect design leads to:

  • inconsistent sealing
  • assembly variation

Crystal and Clearance Constraints

NH35:

  • increased height reduces available clearance margin
  • greater risk of hand/crystal interference

SW200-1:

  • more controlled internal spacing
  • easier to manage clearances

Case Design Trade-Offs

NH35 Advantages

  • lower cost
  • widely available
  • tolerant of simpler designs

NH35 Constraints

  • larger case size
  • thicker designs
  • increased tolerance variation
  • reliance on spacer systems

SW200-1 Advantages

  • compact geometry
  • tighter tolerances
  • more controlled integration

SW200-1 Constraints

  • higher cost
  • requires more precise design
  • less tolerant of poor geometry

When to Use NH35

  • larger case designs
  • cost-sensitive projects
  • designs tolerant of variation

When to Use SW200-1

  • compact or thin cases
  • designs requiring tight control
  • higher-end builds

What This Means for Case Design

Movement selection defines:

  • internal geometry
  • tolerance strategy
  • sealing behaviour
  • overall proportions

It is not interchangeable.

Design must start with the movement.


Relation to System

Movement choice feeds directly into:

  • Watch Movement Dimensions and Case Fit
  • Watch Case Tolerances Explained
  • Watch Crown and Stem Alignment
  • Watch Caseback Design
  • Watch Crystal Fit and Gasket Compression

The system remains consistent.
The constraints change.


Scroll to Top