Dial and Hand Clearance (Internal Stack Explained)

Most watch movements stop working because internal clearances are not correctly defined.

A watch may assemble successfully, but if internal spacing is incorrect, it will fail during operation.

The most common cause is insufficient clearance between:

  • Dial and movement
  • Hands and dial
  • Hands and crystal

This is not visible in early design stages, but it directly affects function.


What Internal Clearance Actually Means

Inside a watch case, multiple components are stacked vertically:

  • Movement
  • Dial
  • Hands (multiple layers)
  • Crystal

Each requires space to function without interference.

This system is known as the internal stack.

If any part of this stack is incorrectly defined, components will collide.


Dial Position and Support

The dial sits directly above the movement.

It must:

  • Be correctly positioned relative to the movement
  • Remain stable under assembly and use
  • Maintain consistent spacing

The dial position defines the starting point for all vertical clearances above it.


Hand Stack (Critical Layering)

Watch hands are not a single element.

They are layered components:

  • Hour hand
  • Minute hand
  • Seconds hand (if present)

Each hand sits at a different height.

Requirements:

  • Vertical clearance between each hand
  • Clearance between the lowest hand and the dial
  • Clearance between the highest hand and the crystal

If these clearances are incorrect:

  • Hands will collide
  • Movement will stop
  • Visible defects may occur

Clearance Between Hands and Dial

The lowest hand (typically the hour hand) must clear the dial surface.

If clearance is too small:

  • Hand rubs against the dial
  • Increased friction
  • Movement stoppage

If clearance is too large:

  • Visual proportion issues
  • Reduced stability

This clearance must be controlled precisely.


Clearance Between Hands and Crystal

The highest hand must not contact the crystal.

This is one of the most common failure points.

If clearance is too small:

  • Hands contact the crystal
  • Movement stops or is damaged

If clearance is too large:

  • Case thickness increases unnecessarily
  • Proportions are affected

This clearance directly influences case height.


Interaction with Movement Thickness

Movement thickness defines the base of the internal stack.

However, it does not include:

  • Dial thickness
  • Hand heights
  • Required clearances

All of these must be added to determine total internal height.

This relationship is defined in movement dimensions.


Tolerance Stack-Up

Clearance is not defined by a single dimension.

It is affected by multiple variations:

  • Dial thickness variation
  • Hand height variation
  • Movement positioning tolerance
  • Crystal seating variation

These combine into total stack variation.

If not accounted for, components may contact even if nominal dimensions appear correct.


Dynamic Clearance (Movement in Operation)

Components do not remain perfectly static.

Factors include:

  • Slight movement of components
  • Shock or vibration
  • Manufacturing variation

Clearance must allow for real-world conditions, not just static positioning.


Relationship to Crystal Fit

Crystal position defines the upper boundary of the internal stack.

Incorrect crystal seating will reduce available clearance.

This relationship is explained in watch crystal fit.


Relationship to Caseback Depth

Caseback position defines the lower boundary of the system.

If internal height is miscalculated:

  • Movement may be compressed
  • Rotor clearance may be affected

See caseback fit and sealing for system interaction.


Common Design Mistakes

  • Ignoring hand stack height
  • Designing only to movement thickness
  • Not accounting for tolerance stack-up
  • Minimising clearance to reduce case thickness
  • Treating components as static

These errors lead to:

  • Movement stoppage
  • Component wear
  • Assembly issues

Correct Design Approach

A proper internal clearance process follows:

  1. Define movement thickness
  2. Add dial thickness
  3. Define hand stack heights
  4. Establish required clearances between all layers
  5. Define crystal position
  6. Validate total internal height
  7. Account for tolerance variation

Engineering Takeaway

Internal clearance is not optional.

It defines whether the movement can operate without interference.

A watch that looks correct but lacks clearance will fail in use.


Final Principle

If components do not have space to move, the watch will not work.


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


🔧

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

Scroll to Top