The present invention concerns mechanical alarm watches, which include a mechanism for displaying the alarm time over twenty-four hours. The present invention more specifically concerns such alarm time display mechanisms.
Watches fitted with an alarm function and including an alarm time indication mechanism are known. Most of these timepieces include a striking work that is released every twelve hours and whose strike time is indicated by an additional hand. The alarm time may be set by moving the additional hand around the dial using the time-setting stem. One drawback of such timepieces is that it is not possible to set the alarm time more than twelve hours in advance.
GB Patent No. 1397982 discloses a timekeeper with an alarm that can be set twenty-four hours in advance. The dial of this timepiece includes an additional scale that divides the circumference of the dial into twenty-four hours. An alarm hand cooperates with this scale to indicate the selected alarm time. It is thus possible to select the striking time up to twenty-four hours in advance. This prior solution also has drawbacks. The division of the dial into twenty-four hours instead of twelve is unusual and can cause confusion. In such conditions, manipulation errors caused by incorrect reading of the alarm time are possible. Moreover, the fact of indicating the alarm time with a single hand associated with a dial including a large number of divisions means that the alarm time cannot be set with precision.
CH Patent No. 510906 discloses an alarm indicating and releasing device for a timepiece using a twelve-hour dial but that is only released every twenty-four hours. This feature is obtained owing to a cam moving intermittently every twelve hours to activate and deactivate the striking work once every two times. A coloured mark visible through the dial indicates whether the striking work will be released during the next twelve hours or the following twelve hours. The solution proposed by this prior document overcomes some of the aforementioned problems. However, the meaning of the coloured mark is not obvious to a new user. It is doubtful that someone would be able to understand the alarm time setting principle without using the instructions.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an alarm watch including an alarm time indication device that can be set up to twenty-four hours in advance and which is as easy to read as possible.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an alarm watch wherein the alarm time can be set with a high level of precision.
The present invention therefore provides an alarm watch in accordance with claim 1.
One advantage of the present invention is that the alarm time display means include a conventional twelve-hour display. This display can be read effortlessly, which limits the risk of errors when the alarm time is selected. Moreover, the fact of selecting the alarm time using a minute hand in addition to the hour hand provides more precise setting of the alarm time.
Another advantage of the present invention is that, unlike the distinction between the “next twelve hours” and the “following twelve hours” proposed in CH Patent No. 510906, the distinction between the morning time and the afternoon or evening time is a usual distinction that can be understood without any effort.
It will also be understood that the principle of indicating a time in twenty-four hours using a twelve hour display completed by an indication specifying whether the time is comprised between midnight and midday (AM) or comprised between midday and midnight (PM), is not, in itself, novel. However, these displays concern the current time and not the alarm time. Moreover, these AM/PM current time displays are generally deemed redundant since the wearer of a watch does not, in principle, need to use the latter to distinguish between night and day. Moreover, the fact of completing a twelve-hour current time display with an AM/PM indicator mechanism necessarily leads to an increase in the energy necessary for the watch to function. Given the foregoing, it will be evident that those skilled in the art may be unfavourably prejudiced against AM/PM displays.
Surprisingly, all of the defects that have just been mentioned concerning AM/PM displays disappear when this type of display is used for indicating an alarm time. To start with, in accordance with the above description, the possibility of being able to select a time in a twenty-four hour period constitutes an indisputable advantage when the time concerned is an alarm time. Moreover, the alarm time is a static indication, which only changes when the wearer of the watch selects a new alarm time. Thus the alarm time indication mechanism according to the invention is not driven by the watch movement. This mechanism does not, therefore, consume any mechanical energy.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the present invention, the watch in which the mechanism according to the invention is integrated includes at least two distinct dials. One of these dials is provided for displaying the alarm time and the other dial is provided for displaying the current time.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear upon reading the following description, given solely by way of non-limiting example, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
In order to facilitate comprehension of the following description, which specifically concerns the present invention, this description starts by presenting an alarm mechanism of the prior art, with reference to
The movement shown in
The watch further includes a striking mechanism, which is not shown, and a release mechanism. This mechanism includes a pinion 21, coaxially driven into motion work pinion 14, and meshing with a wheel 22 freely mounted on hour pipe 16. The gear ratios are calculated such that the movement drives wheel 22 through one revolution in twenty-four hours. It can also be seen in
The plate of the “24 hour” wheel 22 includes three lugs 24 arranged at an unequal distance from the centre of the wheel and angularly shifted in relation to each other. The release mechanism further includes a release wheel 26 friction mounted in the arbour of the hands and thus coaxial with wheel 22. The pipe of wheel 26 carries an alarm time hand 29. This hand is provided for cooperating with additional indications (not shown) defining a twenty-four hour hour-circle around the dial.
In a known manner, the alarm watch further includes a winding and time-setting stem (not shown) for setting the time and moving alarm time hand 29. The switch between the time-setting function and the alarm hand movement function can for example be achieved using a push-button (not shown), the function of which is to mesh release wheel 26 with an intermediate wheel, itself driven by the sliding pinion (not shown). This type of mechanism is disclosed, in particular, in CH Patent No. 261676. Owing to this mechanism, the wearer of the watch can move the release wheel 26 in rotation by rotating the winding and time-setting stem. Thus, he can move alarm time hand 29 into a position corresponding to the desired alarm time.
The release mechanism of
We have seen that, in the alarm watch shown in
In a known manner, hour hand 33 and minute hand 35 are kinematically connected by a motion work such that the minute hand completes exactly 12 revolutions for one revolution of the hour hand.
AM/PM cam 44 is secured to release wheel 26, such that one complete revolution of the cam corresponds to two revolutions completed by hour hand 33. In such conditions, since the two transition flanks 45 and 46 are separated from each other by a half-revolution, lever 48 encounters one of the two transition flanks 45 and 46 exactly once per revolution of hour hand 33. Cam 44 can thus be angularly fitted to release wheel 26 such that lever 48's encounter with one or other of the two transition flanks always coincides with the superposition of hour hand 33 and minute hand 35 at twelve o'clock. The AM/PM hand 55 carried by lever 48 is provided for indicating whether the alarm time displayed by hands 33 and 35 is situated between midnight and midday (AM) or between midday and midnight (PM). It will therefore be clear that AM/PM hand 52 switches from one indication to the other each time that lever 48 encounters one of transition flanks 45 or 46.
Let us recall that the twenty-four hour alarm time display mechanism in AM/PM mode that has just been described, is a static display which is not driven by the watch movement. In such conditions, the presence thereof has no influence on the power reserve.
As has been seen, in the embodiment that has just been described, the release mechanism is a mechanism that has already been disclosed as such in the prior art document GB 1397982. However, it will be understood that various alterations and/or improvements evident to those skilled in the art could be made to the embodiment that forms the subject of this description without departing from the scope of the present invention defined by the annexed claims. In particular cooperation between “24 hour” wheel 22 and release wheel 26 must not necessarily be obtained by pressing these two wheels axially one against the other. The ordinarily skilled person in the art will understand that the two wheels could also cooperate, for example, through a cam type mechanism. In this case the circumference of one of the wheel would carry a notch, while the other wheel would carry some kind of cam follower.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06123787.1 | Nov 2006 | EP | regional |