SW200-1 Case Core: Why Most Case Designs Fail

The Sellita SW200-1 is widely used.

Most cases built around it do not fail visibly.
They fail dimensionally.

The failure appears during:

  • assembly
  • sealing
  • long-term use

The cause is not complexity.
It is incorrect geometry.


Failure Starts With Assumptions

Most case designs begin with:

  • external shape
  • approximate movement dimensions
  • visual alignment

This approach ignores:

  • tolerance
  • stack variation
  • interface constraints

The result is geometry that only works nominally.


Movement Fit Is Not Defined

Common issue:

  • case bore matches nominal movement diameter

This ignores:

  • machining tolerance
  • movement variation

Result:

  • some movements do not fit
  • others move inside the case

Both are failures.


Stem Alignment Is Incorrect

The stem defines a fixed axis.

Many designs:

  • position crown visually
  • ignore axis definition

Result:

  • misalignment
  • binding
  • wear

This failure is not correctable after machining.


Axial Stack Is Not Controlled

Designs often:

  • sum nominal heights
  • ignore variation

Result:

  • hands contact crystal
  • caseback cannot close
  • gasket compression is incorrect

The system fails under tolerance extremes.


Sealing Is Not Engineered

Sealing is often treated as:

  • adding a gasket
  • assuming compression

Without defined geometry:

  • compression is inconsistent
  • sealing varies between units

This results in:

  • leakage
  • unreliable performance

Crown Tube Integration Fails

The tube is often:

  • added late
  • poorly aligned
  • incorrectly sized

Result:

  • crown does not engage correctly
  • sealing fails
  • tube loosens over time

Tolerances Are Not Defined

Nominal geometry is not sufficient.

Without tolerance:

  • assembly becomes inconsistent
  • function varies across units

Designs that work once fail in production.


Machining Constraints Are Ignored

Geometry is often:

  • not machinable
  • not accessible
  • too complex

Result:

  • features cannot be produced
  • tolerances cannot be held

The design fails before assembly.


Failure Appears Late

These problems are not visible in CAD.

They appear:

  • during machining
  • during assembly
  • during testing

At this stage:

  • cost increases
  • redesign is required

Why This Happens

Because the design is:

  • nominal
  • surface-driven
  • not constraint-based

It does not account for:

  • real movement geometry
  • tolerance
  • manufacturing

What Prevents Failure

A correct system defines:

  • movement fit
  • stem axis
  • axial stack
  • sealing interfaces
  • tolerance strategy

Before external design begins.


What the SW200-1 Case Core Does

The SW200-1 Case Core removes these failure points.

It provides:

  • defined movement integration
  • fixed stem axis
  • controlled axial stack
  • tolerance-aware geometry
  • manufacturable structure

It replaces assumption with constraint.


What This Means in Practice

Instead of:

  • testing multiple iterations
  • correcting alignment issues
  • adjusting geometry after failure

You start with:

  • a valid internal system
  • correct interfaces
  • manufacturable geometry

Relation to the System

These failures originate from ignoring:

  • Watch Movement Dimensions and Case Fit
  • Watch Case Tolerances Explained
  • Watch Crown and Stem Alignment
  • Watch Caseback Design
  • Watch Crystal Fit and Gasket Compression

The case core implements them.


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