This application is a 371 of Application No. PCT/CH02/00261, filed May 14, 2002, which claims priority from Swiss Patent Application No. 0878/01, filed May 14, 2001.
1. Field of the Invention
Both analogue and digital chronographs are known from the prior art. This invention relates to an analogue chronograph comprising a digital display.
2. Description of the Related Art
In the case of known analogue timepieces and chronographs, the date indicator, for example, is digital. It is additionally known here to separate the 10s digits of the date and the units digits.
In the case of chronographs, the seconds part of the time at which the relevant chronograph is to be stopped is usually indicated by a centrally rotating second hand. Minute indicators and any hour indicators present are constituted by small dials.
CH 119 761 presents a timepiece in the case of which the hour is displayed digitally in a window which moves along with a movable disk which displays the minutes in extension of the window.
EP 389 732 discloses a further timepiece, in the case of which a disk with numerals is provided, with the result that a corresponding display is visible in a window. In this case, the magnitude of the disk provided with numerals is coordinated with the magnitude of the rotating disk, with the result that the numbers may be selected to be as large as possible.
Chronographs of the prior art have hand indicators. The disadvantage with known chronographs with hand indicators is that minutes and hours are difficult to read. This applies, in particular, to the latter being read during an activity in which the person wearing the timepiece cannot spend a few seconds concentrating on the timepiece in order to read the dial strokes precisely. This applies, for example, to vehicle drivers and pilots. The timepieces which are preferred by pilots in particular are thus usually configured with a relatively large dial, in order for it to be possible to increase the distance between dial strokes and to enhance the reading capability.
Taking this prior art as the departure point, the object of the invention is to configure a chronograph of the type mentioned in the introduction such that the time at which the chronograph is stopped is easy to read.
This object is achieved according to the invention, in the case of a chronograph of the type mentioned in the introduction, in that the digital display displays hours and/or minutes by numbers which are arranged on individual circular tracks and, under a viewing window, configure the hour indicator and/or the minute indicator in digital form.
The advantage for the users, in the case of such a digital display of the minutes, is that he/she can read the minutes or hours directly in digital form without using a dial-stroke indicator. This allows a time which has been registered by the chronograph to be read reliably even in the case of vibrations and makes it possible to cast just a quick glance at the dial.
In the case of a preferred embodiment, the tens digits of the minutes are separated from the units digits. In particular, it is possible, using a restoring function, to move the indicator for the hours, tens of minutes and minutes back to the starting position, the display of the number zero.
In the case of a preferred use form, it is possible for the display also to be configured as a tachymeter. In this case, the display is configured as a speed indicator which, by way of inverse gearwheel transmission, counts down from a maximum settable speed. As an alternative to this, it is possible to provide a mechanism which in a manner similar to a flyback chronograph, only takes effect when the stopping function is triggered, i.e. the time is stopped. A wheel train is set in motion at this point in time, said wheel train remaining at the stop second at the point at which the time is stopped. The indicator disks, rather than being moved during the actual stopping operation, are thus made to follow on. The energy for this follow-on movement, similar to the repetition, may be obtained from an additional energy source which is charged up by a switchover mechanism or the like such as a button.
For displaying the digital numerals in the dark, it is possible to coat the surround of the display window with a predetermined quantity of fluorescent material, which supplies sufficient light to allow the numerals, which are made of an essentially highly reflective material and are arranged on the indicator disks, to light up indirectly against the background of the disks.
The invention will now be explained in more detail with reference to exemplary embodiments. In the figures:
The display can be seen through the windows 9 in the immobile dial 1. The windows 9 for hours and minutes may be continuous or, as in the figures, separated by a crosspiece. The numbers 6, 7, 8 may be of the same size, or the hour indicator 8, in particular, may be selected to be somewhat smaller than the minute numbers 6 or 7.
In the case of a preferred use form, the chronograph is also configured as a tachymeter. In this case, the display is activated as a speed indicator which, by way of an inverse gearwheel transmission, counts down from a maximum settable speed. In the case of such a function as a speed indicator, it is possible, for example in the first four seconds after the chronograph has been started, to set the number 900 (for 900 kilometers per hour), and then to count down in the speed correspondingly. It is possible here to switch over to a different graduation on a toothed disk on the stop-second tube.
As an alternative to this, it is possible to provide a mechanism which only takes effect when the stopping function is triggered. A wheel train is set in motion at this point in time, said wheel train remaining at the stop second at the point at which the time is stopped. The indicator disks, rather than being moved during the actual stopping operation, are thus made to follow on.
This configuration ensures that it is exclusively the second hand 5 of the chronograph which passes over the numerals of the hour and minute indicators of the chronograph, and the reading capability of this hour and minute is thus not adversely affected to any significant extent thereby.
It is, of course, also possible for the two hands 2 and 3 to be formed merely from a thin strand of material, e.g. carbon fiber, which, in order to display in the darkness, has been impregnated with a matrix of epoxy resin and a fluorescent-material mixture. Only small regions of the numbers are covered in the case of such thin hands 2 and 3 for hours and minutes, with the result that the number can still easily be read directly.
In the case of both exemplary embodiments, it is possible to provide a device for displaying the digital numerals in the dark. One possibility is for disk material located beneath the window or windows 9 to be coated with a fluorescent material. The numerals then stand out, for example, against this background. It is also possible for a ring of fluorescent material to be positioned around the surround of the window 9, so that light therefrom falls onto the window surface. If the numerals are then made essentially of a highly reflective material, they light up against the dark background of the disks. Of course, it is also possible to provide a (storage) battery-assisted luminous display.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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878/01 | May 2001 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH02/00261 | 5/14/2002 | WO | 00 | 11/12/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/093273 | 11/21/2002 | WO | A |
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5623456 | Miyamoto et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
6761478 | Schmiedchen et al. | Jul 2004 | B2 |
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119761 | Apr 1927 | CH |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040170088 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |