The crown tube defines the interface between:
- the case
- the crown
- the stem
It is a fixed mechanical component.
Its position, fit, and geometry determine:
- crown alignment
- sealing performance
- long-term durability
If the tube is incorrectly sized or installed, the system fails.
Crown Tube Function
The tube provides:
- a guide for the stem
- a mounting interface for the crown
- a sealing interface (with gaskets or internal seals)
It must:
- align with the stem axis
- remain fixed under load
- maintain sealing over time
Key Dimensions
Crown tubes are defined by:
- Outer diameter (mm)
- Inner diameter (mm)
- Length (mm)
- Thread specification (if threaded)
These define:
- fit into the case
- compatibility with the crown
- interaction with the stem
All dimensions must be compatible with the selected crown and movement.
Case Interface (Tube to Case Fit)
The tube must be secured in the case.
Common methods:
Press-Fit Tube
- interference between tube OD and case hole
Requires:
- controlled hole diameter
- defined interference range
Too little interference:
- tube becomes loose
Too much interference:
- case deformation
- installation difficulty
Threaded Tube
- tube screws into the case
Requires:
- matching thread geometry
- controlled thread tolerance
Advantages:
- better positional control
- serviceability
Bonded Tube
- adhesive used for retention
Less common for precision applications.
Dependent on process control.
Hole Sizing in the Case
The case hole defines tube fit.
For press-fit systems:
- hole diameter must be smaller than tube OD by a defined interference
Hole tolerance directly affects:
- retention force
- positional accuracy
If the hole is out of tolerance:
- tube may shift
- alignment is lost
Tube Length and Position
Tube length must match:
- case wall thickness
- crown engagement depth
- sealing requirements
Incorrect length results in:
- insufficient crown engagement
- poor sealing
- interference with internal components
Position must align with:
- stem axis
- movement seating
Alignment With Stem
The tube centreline must align with the stem axis.
This is defined by:
- stem height (mm)
- movement position in the case
- hole location in the case
Misalignment cannot be corrected during installation.
Failure results in:
- stem binding
- increased wear
- functional failure
Crown Interface
The tube must match the crown.
Key considerations:
- thread compatibility
- sealing interface
- engagement depth
If mismatched:
- crown will not seat correctly
- sealing fails
- threads wear prematurely
Sealing Considerations
Sealing may occur:
- inside the crown
- between crown and tube
- at the tube-case interface
Each interface depends on:
- geometry
- material
- compression
Incorrect sizing leads to:
- leakage
- inconsistent sealing
Installation Effects
Installation affects final position.
Press-fit tubes:
- may shift during insertion
- depend on alignment during pressing
Threaded tubes:
- more controlled
- dependent on thread accuracy
Installation must not:
- distort the case
- alter alignment
Tolerance Considerations
Tube performance depends on:
- tube manufacturing tolerance
- case hole tolerance
- installation variation
Combined variation defines:
- alignment accuracy
- retention reliability
- sealing consistency
Design must account for worst-case conditions.
What Goes Wrong
Common failures:
- tube loosens over time
- crown does not align with stem
- sealing fails at tube interface
- crown engagement is inconsistent
- threads strip or wear prematurely
These are dimensional and installation problems.
Designing for Reliable Tube Integration
Correct approach:
- select tube and crown as a system
- define case hole geometry
- define fit (press or thread)
- position relative to stem axis
- evaluate tolerance stack
The tube is not a small detail.
It is a critical interface.
Relation to System
The crown tube connects:
- stem alignment
- sealing system
- case geometry
It must be designed with:
- Watch Crown and Stem Alignment
- Watch Case Tolerances Explained
- Watch Case CAD: From Movement to Manufacturable Geometry
Access
HorologyCAD does not offer custom design services.
The focus is on building movement-led case systems that can be used directly.
Crown tube sizing references and CAD geometry will be released.
Join the list to get access when available.