Movement to Case Fit

Definition

Movement to case fit defines how a selected movement is translated into a functional case geometry.

This step establishes the relationship between movement dimensions and the internal case structure required to house it.

It converts movement data into a usable design envelope.


Role Within the System

Movement to case fit is the transition between selection and engineering.

It sits between:

Movement Selection
→ Movement to Case Fit
→ Constraint Definition

At this stage, the movement is fixed and all case geometry begins to derive from it.


Movement as the Reference Geometry

The movement defines the primary dimensions that control case design:

movement diameter
movement height
stem position
dial and hand stack envelope

These parameters establish the boundaries within which the case must be engineered.

No case dimension can be defined independently of these constraints.


Establishing the Case Envelope

The first step in case design is defining the internal envelope required to contain the movement.

This includes:

radial envelope (case diameter relative to movement)
axial envelope (case thickness relative to movement height)
vertical positioning of the movement within the case

This envelope forms the base structure for all further design decisions.


Primary Fit Conditions

Movement to case fit is governed by three primary conditions:

Radial Fit

Defines the relationship between movement diameter and internal case diameter.

This determines:

lateral stability
available clearance for insertion
space for movement securing systems

→ Radial Clearance


Axial Fit

Defines the relationship between movement height and case thickness.

This determines:

crystal clearance
caseback position
internal stack height

→ Axial Clearance


Positional Alignment

Defines the vertical and angular positioning of the movement.

This determines:

stem alignment with crown
dial position relative to crystal
caseback sealing interface

→ Internal Case Geometry & Movement Cavity Sizing


Why This Step Matters

Failure to correctly define movement to case fit results in:

incorrect case proportions
misaligned crown and stem
insufficient internal clearance
interference between components

All downstream errors originate from incorrect initial fit definition.


System Integration

Movement to case fit defines the starting geometry for all constraint pages.

Once established, proceed to:

Radial Clearance
Axial Clearance
Internal Case Geometry & Movement Cavity Sizing

These define the detailed constraints required to produce a valid case design.


Final Statement

Movement to case fit converts a selected movement into a defined case structure.

A valid design must:

derive all internal geometry from movement dimensions
define radial and axial relationships before detailing
maintain alignment between all interfacing components

If movement fit is not correctly defined, the case cannot be engineered.


Next Step

Once the movement has been selected, the next constraint is the internal case geometry that will physically contain and locate it.

Continue to: Internal Case Geometry & Movement Cavity Sizing


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