Miyota 9015 Dimensions & Technical Data for Watch Case Design

Definition

This page defines the critical dimensions and engineering parameters of the Miyota 9015 required for movement-led watch case design.

The Miyota 9015 is not only a slim automatic movement selected for timekeeping. In case design, it becomes the fixed internal reference geometry that controls the movement cavity, crown position, axial stack, dial interface, hand clearance, caseback position, rotor clearance, and movement retention system.

These values are not passive reference numbers.
In movement-led case design, they become fixed design constraints.

Why Miyota 9015 Dimensions Matter

A watch case designed around the Miyota 9015 must begin from verified movement geometry.

The movement defines:

  • Internal case geometry
  • Movement cavity diameter
  • Crown and stem alignment
  • Axial stack structure
  • Dial seat position
  • Hand clearance envelope
  • Caseback and rotor clearance
  • Movement retention requirements

Incorrect dimensional assumptions can result in:

  • Stem and crown misalignment
  • Dial or hand clearance failure
  • Rotor or caseback interference
  • Poor movement retention
  • Assembly incompatibility
  • Unnecessary case thickness
  • Functional failure under operation

The Miyota 9015 is a relatively slim automatic movement, but a slim movement does not automatically create a thin or reliable case.

A case can look correct externally and still fail if the internal architecture is not derived from the movement.

Manufacturer Technical Basis

The Miyota 9015 technical documentation provides the dimensional basis for case design. Miyota identifies the 9015 as an 11½ ligne premium automatic movement with 3.90 mm height, 28,800 vibrations per hour, 24 jewels, stop-second function, automatic and hand winding, quick date setting, and approximately 42 hours running time.

Miyota documentation also shows the movement reference diameter as Φ26.00 mm and lists related casing components including attached stem 065-A05, dial fixing screw 929-808, spacer 212-A47, and plastic holder 500-002. The specification also notes that clearance changes depending on the glass, case structure, and hand length.

These values should always be checked against the latest official Miyota technical documentation before being used for manufacturing or final CAD release.

Manufacturer data is the starting point, not the finished case solution.

The technical documentation does not provide a complete watch case architecture. It does not define the designer’s final radial clearance strategy, axial stack allowance, crown tube installation method, gasket compression, caseback structure, movement holder design, machining tolerance strategy, or external case styling.

That is the role of movement-led case design.

Core Miyota 9015 Dimensions

Movement Diameter

Approximate movement reference diameter: 26.00 mm.

This dimension controls:

  • Minimum internal case cavity size
  • Movement holder geometry
  • Radial clearance strategy
  • Internal shoulder and support geometry
  • Assembly behaviour during casing

The case cavity should not simply copy the movement diameter. It must include controlled clearance, machining allowance, tolerance behaviour, and a defined method of movement retention.

Radial behaviour is resolved through Radial Clearance Between Movement and Case.

Movement Height

Approximate movement height: 3.90 mm.

This dimension controls:

  • Axial stack baseline
  • Minimum internal case depth
  • Dial-side positioning
  • Caseback position
  • Rotor clearance
  • Total case thickness

The 9015’s thin movement height is one of its most important case-design characteristics.

However, movement height is not the same as final case thickness. The final vertical architecture also depends on dial thickness, hand stack height, crystal clearance, caseback clearance, rotor space, gasket geometry, and retention method.

A thin movement can still produce a poor or unnecessarily thick case if the axial stack is not controlled.

Vertical behaviour is governed by Movement Height vs Case Thickness and Axial Clearance.

Stem Height

Stem height defines the vertical position of the crown and stem interface relative to the movement’s casing reference.

Stem height controls:

  • Crown tube vertical position
  • Case wall bore location
  • Crown seat geometry
  • Stem alignment
  • Crown operation under load

This is one of the most important Miyota 9015 case design constraints.

The crown tube cannot be positioned from external styling alone. It must be derived from the movement stem axis first, then integrated into the case wall and crown design.

Alignment must be resolved through Stem Height to Crown Tube Position Relationship and Crown and Stem Alignment.

Stem Position

The Miyota 9015 stem position is fixed relative to the movement centreline.

This controls:

  • Crown placement
  • Case side geometry
  • Crown tube bore location
  • External crown symmetry
  • Relationship between movement centre, dial centre, and case centre

The stem axis is not adjustable. If the case tube is misplaced, the design must be corrected at the case level, not by forcing the stem into alignment.

Dial Interface

Dial Diameter

Dial diameter is design-dependent. In many Miyota 9015 case designs the dial may extend beyond the movement diameter, but the final value depends on the dial seat, rehaut, case opening, date display, and visual architecture.

Dial diameter controls:

  • Dial seat geometry
  • Rehaut position
  • Chapter ring clearance
  • Date window relationship
  • Visual proportions
  • Case opening size

The dial is not defined by the movement diameter alone. It must be coordinated with the movement location, dial feet, hand stack, rehaut, date position, and crystal opening.

Dial Fixing and Dial Position

Miyota documentation identifies dial fixing hardware associated with the 9015, including screw for dial fixing 929-808.

Dial fixing controls:

  • Dial attachment
  • Dial rotational alignment
  • Date window alignment
  • Relationship between dial graphics and crown/stem orientation

A dial that appears dimensionally suitable can still be unusable if the fixing method, date window, or dial-side geometry does not match the 9015 configuration.

Hand Stack Parameters

The hand stack defines the vertical clearance required above the dial.

It includes:

  • Hour hand clearance above the dial
  • Minute hand clearance above the hour hand
  • Seconds hand clearance above the minute hand
  • Clearance below the crystal
  • Allowance for hand length, hand flex, dial tolerance, and assembly variation

Miyota’s specification notes that clearance changes depending on the glass, case structure, and hand length.

Hand stack behaviour controls:

  • Dial height
  • Crystal underside clearance
  • Rehaut depth
  • Total case thickness
  • Risk of hand collision

A case can have correct movement diameter and correct crown alignment but still fail if the hands collide with the dial, each other, the rehaut, or the crystal.

Hand stack behaviour must be validated through Axial Clearance and Hand Stack Height and Clearance Requirements.

Crown and Stem Interface

The Miyota 9015 crown and stem interface affects both function and sealing.

Miyota documentation identifies the attached stem reference as 065-A05.

The stem controls:

  • Crown engagement
  • Keyless works operation
  • Crown pull positions
  • Torque transmission
  • Tube bore alignment
  • Seal compatibility

The crown system must allow:

  • Full stem engagement
  • Smooth crown operation
  • No lateral stem loading
  • No axial preload
  • Stable operation across winding, date correction, and time setting

The case tube must support sealing and crown operation without forcing the stem away from its natural axis.

Movement Mounting and Retention

The Miyota 9015 must be retained without distorting the movement or allowing uncontrolled movement inside the case.

Miyota documentation identifies associated casing components including spacer 212-A47 and plastic holder 500-002.

Movement mounting geometry controls:

  • Holder or spacer design
  • Clamp or screw compatibility
  • Movement seating
  • Axial retention
  • Service access
  • Shock behaviour

The retention system must prevent movement shift while avoiding excess preload.

A movement that is too loosely retained can move under shock or crown operation. A movement that is over-constrained can suffer from assembly stress, alignment problems, or serviceability issues.

Retention behaviour must align with Movement Securing Methods and Axial Retention and Movement Stack Control.

Tolerance Considerations

Nominal movement dimensions are not sufficient for case design.

Critical tolerance-sensitive areas include:

  • Movement diameter
  • Movement height
  • Stem height
  • Dial position
  • Hand height
  • Rotor clearance
  • Caseback clearance
  • Crown tube bore position
  • Movement holder fit

The case must account for:

  • Movement manufacturing variation
  • Case machining tolerance
  • Dial thickness variation
  • Hand fitting variation
  • Gasket compression
  • Assembly sequence
  • Finishing and coating allowance

The goal is not to make the case as tight as possible.
The goal is to make the movement fit repeatably, assemble correctly, and remain stable in use.

Clearance Requirements

Clearance must be defined deliberately.

Typical controlled clearance zones include:

  • Radial clearance between movement and case
  • Axial clearance above and below the movement
  • Dial-to-crystal clearance
  • Rotor-to-caseback clearance
  • Crown tube-to-stem alignment allowance

Clearance should not be treated as one general allowance across the entire case.

Actual clearance depends on machining method, tolerance stack, finishing, assembly method, movement holder design, and the specific interface being controlled.

Clearance must:

  • Allow reliable assembly
  • Avoid binding
  • Prevent uncontrolled movement
  • Survive tolerance variation
  • Preserve function after casing

Radial and axial clearance should be treated as separate engineering problems, not one general “fit” allowance.

Interaction with Watch Case Design

Miyota 9015 dimensions directly define the internal case system.

They control:

  • Internal case geometry
  • Movement holder size
  • Dial seat position
  • Crown tube location
  • Hand clearance envelope
  • Caseback depth
  • Rotor clearance
  • Retention strategy
  • Serviceability

The external case design must respect these internal constraints.

Lugs, bezel form, case profile, crown guards, and visual styling can vary, but the internal movement-fit architecture must remain controlled around the Miyota 9015.

Why Raw Movement Dimensions Are Not Enough

A movement datasheet gives the dimensions of the movement.
It does not give the full case architecture required to house it correctly.

Raw Miyota 9015 dimensions do not define:

  • Final case cavity geometry
  • Movement holder design
  • Radial clearance strategy
  • Axial stack allowance
  • Crown tube installation
  • Caseback sealing structure
  • Rotor clearance
  • Dial and rehaut architecture
  • Crystal clearance
  • Machining process tolerance
  • Assembly validation

This is the gap between movement data and manufacturable watch case design.

HorologyCAD treats the movement data as the fixed technical basis, then translates that data into case architecture decisions.

Movement-Specific Case Architecture

Designing a case around the Miyota 9015 requires more than placing a movement into a larger circular cavity.

The case must control radial clearance, axial stack height, stem alignment, crown tube position, dial seating, hand clearance, caseback space, rotor clearance, and movement retention as one connected system.

The 9015’s thin height makes it attractive for slim automatic case design, but it also makes axial stack control more important. Poor dial, hand, crystal, rotor, or caseback planning can remove the advantage of the movement’s low profile.

HorologyCAD is being developed around movement-specific, lug-agnostic case architecture systems. The purpose is to provide a manufacturable internal case foundation that can be adapted into different external case styles without redesigning the movement fit from zero each time.

The Miyota 9015 is one of the primary reference movements for this system.

Common Miyota 9015 Case Design Failures

Common failures include:

  • Internal cavity sized from nominal movement diameter only
  • Crown tube positioned from exterior case design rather than stem height
  • Thin movement height assumed to guarantee a thin case
  • Insufficient rotor clearance under the caseback
  • Dial height not coordinated with hand stack
  • Crystal underside too close to the seconds hand
  • Movement holder too loose or over-constrained
  • Caseback used to force axial retention without proper stack control
  • Stem forced into alignment during assembly
  • Tolerance stack ignored until prototyping

Most failures do not come from misunderstanding one dimension.
They come from failing to treat all dimensions as one connected system.

System Context

This page forms the dimensional foundation for Miyota 9015 movement-led case design.

It supports downstream decisions involving:

  • Movement-specific case design
  • Internal case geometry
  • Radial clearance
  • Axial clearance
  • Crown and stem alignment
  • Dial and hand stack control
  • Movement retention
  • Caseback and sealing design
  • Manufacturability

The Miyota 9015 defines the internal reference system.
The case must be designed around it.

Final Statement

The Miyota 9015 defines the fundamental dimensional constraints of the watch case.

Accurate interpretation of these values is required to:

  • Maintain alignment across interfaces
  • Control radial and axial clearance
  • Position the crown tube correctly
  • Protect hand and rotor clearance
  • Preserve the benefit of the movement’s slim height
  • Ensure manufacturability and assembly
  • Deliver reliable long-term performance

All case design must be derived from verified movement geometry.

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