NH35 / NH36 Movement Dimensions and Case Design Constraints

Most NH35-based watch builds fail because the movement is treated as generic.

The NH35 and NH36 are widely used, but they are often misunderstood in case design.

Builders assume:

  • The movement is easy to work with
  • Dimensions can be approximated
  • Standard cases can be adapted without issue

This leads to misalignment, poor fit, and unnecessary redesign.

The NH35 is not difficult — but it must be treated as a fixed system with defined constraints.


What the NH35 / NH36 Actually Is

The NH35 and NH36 are automatic mechanical movements produced by Seiko Instruments.

They are commonly used in:

  • Entry-level mechanical watches
  • Microbrand designs
  • Custom builds

They share the same core architecture.

The primary difference:

  • NH35 → date
  • NH36 → day-date

For case design, their dimensional constraints are effectively the same.


Key Movement Dimensions

The NH35 defines the starting point for all case geometry.

Primary dimensions:

  • Diameter: ~27.4 mm
  • Thickness: ~5.3 mm
  • Stem height: ~1.92 mm (from movement base)

These values define:

  • Internal case diameter
  • Total case thickness
  • Crown position

They must be used as reference points — not approximations.


Movement Diameter and Case Fit

The nominal diameter is approximately 27.4 mm.

This does not mean the case should be designed to 27.4 mm internally.

Real-world requirement:

  • Radial clearance must be included
  • Space for movement holder or spacer must be accounted for

If designed too tightly:

  • Movement cannot be inserted
  • Risk of damage during assembly

If too loose:

  • Movement instability
  • Misalignment

This is a tolerance-controlled interface.


Movement Thickness and Internal Stack

The movement thickness (~5.3 mm) defines the base layer.

However, total internal height must also include:

  • Dial thickness
  • Hand stack height
  • Clearance to crystal
  • Rotor clearance
  • Caseback structure

Failure to account for the full stack leads to:

  • Rotor contact with caseback
  • Hands contacting crystal
  • Assembly issues

Stem Height and Crown Alignment

Stem height (~1.92 mm) is one of the most critical dimensions.

It defines:

  • Crown centreline
  • Crown tube position
  • Side profile of the case

If this is incorrectly applied:

  • Stem enters at an angle
  • Increased friction during winding
  • Premature wear

This relationship is explained in crown position and stem alignment.


Movement Holder and Positioning

The NH35 typically requires a movement holder or spacer.

This component:

  • Centres the movement within the case
  • Controls radial position
  • Provides stability

Design must account for:

  • Holder thickness
  • Fit within case
  • Interaction with dial and caseback

Ignoring this results in poor fit and instability.


Dial and Hand Clearance

The NH35 supports standard dial and hand configurations, but clearance must still be defined.

Key considerations:

  • Dial seating height
  • Hand stack spacing
  • Clearance to crystal

Incorrect spacing leads to:

  • Hand interference
  • Movement stoppage

See dial and hand clearance for full system explanation.


Caseback Depth and Rotor Clearance

As an automatic movement, the NH35 includes a rotor.

This requires:

  • Sufficient clearance between rotor and caseback
  • Correct internal depth

If clearance is insufficient:

  • Rotor contacts caseback
  • Movement performance is affected

Caseback geometry must be designed accordingly.


Tolerance Considerations

The NH35 must not be treated as dimensionally exact.

Design must include:

  • Radial clearance for insertion
  • Axial clearance for internal stack
  • Allowance for manufacturing variation

These concepts are detailed in watch case tolerances.


Common Design Mistakes

  • Designing case diameter equal to movement diameter
  • Ignoring stem height when placing crown
  • Underestimating total internal height
  • Not accounting for movement holder
  • Treating NH35 as a “drop-in” component

These errors lead to:

  • Misalignment
  • Assembly failure
  • Reduced reliability

Correct Design Approach

A proper NH35 case design process follows:

  1. Define movement reference dimensions
  2. Establish radial clearance and holder system
  3. Define vertical stack (movement + dial + hands + clearances)
  4. Set crown position based on stem height
  5. Define caseback depth and rotor clearance
  6. Validate tolerances and assembly

Engineering Takeaway

The NH35 is widely used because it is reliable — not because it is forgiving.

It still requires correct engineering to function properly in a custom case.


Final Principle

A common movement does not remove the need for precise design.


Built from real-world experience developing a custom mechanical watch — including movement selection, CAD commissioning, and engineering validation.


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Some builders choose to start from a pre-developed CAD foundation to avoid early-stage errors.

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