The crystal is a structural component.
It defines:
- upper boundary of the case
- clearance to hands
- part of the sealing system
If the crystal interface is incorrect:
- sealing fails
- structural integrity is compromised
- internal components are damaged
Crystal Types and Mounting
Common approaches:
Press-Fit Crystal
- interference fit into the case
Relies on:
- controlled diameter difference
- material deformation
Constraints:
- high sensitivity to tolerance
- stress introduced into the crystal
Gasket-Mounted Crystal
- crystal sits against a gasket
- compression provides sealing
Relies on:
- controlled compression
- stable seating geometry
Constraints:
- axial tolerance control
- gasket behaviour over time
Bonded Crystal
- adhesive used for retention and sealing
Constraints:
- process control
- long-term reliability
Less common in mechanical watch cases.
Crystal Seat Geometry
The case defines the interface.
Key parameters:
- seat diameter (mm)
- seat depth (mm)
- support surface geometry
These define:
- retention
- compression
- alignment
Incorrect geometry leads to:
- uneven load
- stress concentration
- sealing failure
Radial Fit (Press Systems)
For press-fit crystals:
- crystal diameter vs case seat diameter defines interference
Too little interference:
- crystal is loose
- sealing fails
Too much interference:
- excessive stress
- risk of cracking
Fit must account for:
- material properties
- machining tolerance
- temperature variation
Axial Compression (Gasket Systems)
For gasket-mounted crystals:
- compression defines sealing
Compression is controlled by:
- crystal position
- gasket thickness
- case geometry
Too little compression:
- leakage
Too much compression:
- gasket damage
- increased stress on crystal
Interaction With Axial Stack
Crystal position is part of the stack.
It interacts with:
- movement height
- dial thickness
- hand clearance
- caseback compression
If the stack is incorrect:
- hands contact crystal
- crystal sits too high or too low
- sealing becomes inconsistent
Clearance to Hands
Clearance must exist across tolerance range.
Minimum condition:
- smallest internal space
- highest stack
If not controlled:
- hands contact crystal
- functional failure
Clearance must account for:
- hand height variation
- assembly variation
- positional tolerance
Load and Pressure
The crystal experiences load.
Sources:
- press-fit stress
- gasket compression
- external pressure
Design must ensure:
- load is evenly distributed
- stress is within material limits
Failure results in:
- cracking
- displacement
- sealing loss
Tolerance Stack Effects
Crystal performance depends on combined variation.
Key contributors:
- case seat depth
- gasket thickness
- crystal thickness
- axial stack of internal components
At extremes:
- insufficient compression → leakage
- excessive compression → stress
Design must function across full tolerance range.
Manufacturing Considerations
Critical factors:
- machining accuracy of seat
- surface finish
- consistency of crystal dimensions
- gasket material variation
Variation directly affects:
- fit
- sealing
- stress distribution
What Goes Wrong
Common failures:
- crystal cracks during assembly
- sealing fails under pressure
- hands contact crystal
- crystal becomes loose over time
- uneven seating causes stress concentration
These are dimensional and tolerance failures.
Designing for Reliable Crystal Fit
Correct approach:
- define mounting method
- design seat geometry accordingly
- define radial or axial fit
- evaluate tolerance stack
- verify clearance to hands
The crystal interface must:
- retain the crystal
- seal the case
- avoid structural failure
Relation to System
Crystal fit connects:
- axial stack
- sealing strategy
- tolerance control
It cannot be designed independently.
See:
- Watch Case Tolerances Explained
- Watch Caseback Design: Threads, Gaskets, and Compression Tolerances
- Watch Movement Dimensions and Case Fit
Access
HorologyCAD does not offer custom design services.
The focus is on building movement-led case systems that can be used directly.
Crystal interface geometry and sealing reference systems will be released.
Join the list to get access when available.