Designing a watch case is not surface modeling.
It is a constrained mechanical system built around a fixed movement.
The movement defines:
- diameter (mm)
- height (mm)
- stem height (mm)
- dial seat position
Everything else is downstream.
If these constraints are wrong, the case does not assemble, does not seal, and does not function.
What “Watch Case CAD” Actually Means
Watch case CAD is not:
- sketching case shapes
- styling-first design
- rendering-driven workflows
Watch case CAD is:
- movement-first constraint modeling
- tolerance-controlled interfaces
- geometry that can be machined and assembled
The external form is the result, not the starting point.
Required Inputs
If these are not defined, the design is guesswork.
Movement Data
- Movement diameter (mm)
- Movement height (mm)
- Stem height from base (mm)
- Dial seat position (mm)
Functional Requirements
- Water resistance target
- Crown type and tube system
- Crystal type (press / gasket / bonded)
- Caseback type (threaded / press / screwed)
Manufacturing Constraints
- Process (CNC, casting, hybrid)
- Minimum wall thickness (mm)
- Tool access and cutter limitations
- Surface finishing allowances
Core Engineering Problems
These define whether the case works.
Movement Fit
- Radial clearance must allow insertion without rattle
- Axial stack must locate the movement without distortion
- Clamp system must secure without inducing stress
Failure:
- movement shift
- dial misalignment
- hand clearance issues
Stem and Crown Alignment
- Stem axis must intersect crown tube within tolerance
- Crown tube position is fixed relative to movement stem height
- Angular misalignment leads to binding
Failure:
- stem wear
- keyless works damage
- crown engagement failure
Caseback and Sealing
- Thread geometry or press interface must control compression
- Gasket compression must sit within a defined range
- Stack tolerances must not over- or under-compress
Failure:
- water ingress
- thread failure
- inconsistent sealing
Crystal Interface
- Press fit or gasket compression must be controlled
- Crystal seat diameter and depth define retention
- Over-compression induces stress, under-compression leaks
Failure:
- crystal displacement
- fracture under pressure
- sealing failure
Lug Geometry
- Spring bar hole position defines load path
- Wall thickness must support dynamic loads
- Geometry must allow tool access
Failure:
- lug deformation
- hole elongation
- structural failure under load
What Goes Wrong
Most failures are not aesthetic. They are dimensional.
- Stem does not align with crown tube
- Movement does not seat correctly
- Caseback cannot achieve consistent gasket compression
- Crystal fit is unstable under pressure
- Tolerance stack prevents assembly
These are not visible in renders.
They appear during machining, assembly, or testing.
Output: What Proper Case CAD Includes
- Fully constrained 3D geometry
- Movement envelope integrated into the case
- Defined clearances and tolerance strategy
- Section views through all critical interfaces
- Manufacturable features with tool access considered
If it cannot be machined and assembled, it is not complete.
When This Is Required
- Developing a custom watch around a specific movement
- Modifying case geometry for an existing movement
- Preparing for CNC prototyping
- Resolving assembly or sealing failures
Working With HorologyCAD
This is not styling work.
It is engineering-led case development based on real movement constraints.
- Movement-first approach
- mm-only dimensional control
- Tolerance-driven design
- Geometry built for machining and assembly