This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 15163808.7 filed on Apr. 16, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The invention concerns a timepiece balance spring made of micromachinable material comprising a plurality of stages, each forming a spiral wound spring, all parallel to each other and arranged to be assembled to each other at their respective inner ends in a common axial collet or in the same balance staff, wherein each said stage includes, at its respective outer end, its own means of attachment to a balance spring stud which are independent of those of said other stages, said means of attachment comprising means for position adjustment with respect to a balance spring stud which are also independent of those of said other stages, said means of attachment and said means for position adjustment together forming built-in isochronism correction means for said balance spring.
The invention also concerns an escapement mechanism including such a balance spring.
The invention also concerns an escapement mechanism including at least one sprung balance assembly, wherein the outer end of at least one balance spring is attached to a balance spring stud.
The invention concerns a mechanical timepiece movement including at least one escapement mechanism. The invention concerns a watch comprising at least one mechanical timepiece movement.
The invention concerns the field of timepiece mechanisms including balance springs made of micromachinable material, and more specifically escapement mechanisms.
New technologies for the fabrication of balance springs from micromachinable materials, such as silicon, silicon oxide, DLC or similar, implemented by MEMS, DRIE, LIGA or similar methods, have made significant progress, and the springs thus fabricated have significant advantages:
However, with this type of spring made of micromachinable material, fine adjustment is greatly limited, because the spring does not have an independent system for adjustment of the mean frequency and isochronism, which can be used after assembly.
If the isochronous gradient is changed by a modification of the active length, the mean frequency of the corresponding sprung balance assembly is greatly modified, and correction of the balance wheel screws is then generally not sufficient to compensate for this error.
However, a conventional steel balance spring can be adjusted independently, even after assembly, as regards its mean frequency and isochronous gradient, through the use of the index assembly, and because plastic deformation of the balance spring is possible.
Moreover, fabrication systems cannot fabricate sprung balances that are sufficiently close to the nominal geometry to ensure increased chronometric performance, since an error on the order of magnitude of a ppm remains even with extremely careful machining.
FR Patent 2024511, in the name of PORTESCAP, describes a regulating device with a double balance spring, the two balance springs being arranged for mutual temperature compensation.
CH Patent 256274, in the name of ERNEST BOREL, describes an index assembly with a movable stud.
EP Patent 2104006, in the name of NIVAROX, describes a one-piece double balance spring with a common collet, notably made of silicon.
EP Patent 2233989, in the name of ULYSSE NARDIN, describes a balance spring whose outer coil is divided into two strips defining an oblong opening for housing an adjustment member other than the stud.
CH Patent 704677, in the name of MHVJ, describes a tourbillon with a particular stud arrangement, arranged to limit the lateral displacement of the balance spring in the event of a shock.
CH Patent 45160, in the name of MONTRES INVAR, describes a balance spring with two stages with independent outer coils.
EP Patent 2781967, in the name of NIVAROX, describes an escapement mechanism with a stud whose position is movable and adjustable.
The invention therefore proposes to produce a balance spring made of micromachinable material which includes built-in means of adjustment for isochronism.
To this end, the invention concerns a balance spring according to claim 1. The invention also concerns an escapement mechanism according to claim 12.
The invention also concerns a mechanical timepiece movement including at least one such escapement mechanism.
The invention also concerns a watch including at least one mechanical timepiece movement of this type.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following detailed description, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
The invention concerns a timepiece balance spring 1 made of micromachinable material, including but not limited to silicon, or silicon and silicon oxide.
This balance spring 1 includes a plurality of stages 10, which each form a spiral wound spring. Stages 10 are all parallel to each other, and are arranged to be assembled to each other at their respective inner ends 20 in a common axial collet (not shown in the Figures) which may consist of a tube where the respective inner ends 20A, 20B, 20C, . . . are attached, or a similar element, or to be jointly assembled in the same balance staff.
Each stage 10 is made of micromachinable material. In a particular variant, but which, in the current state of technology, is only suitable for certain embodiments where the profiles of the various stages are superposed in the free state of the balance spring, said balance spring 1 is in one-piece.
In most cases, and especially in the embodiments illustrated by the Figures, each stage 10 is made independently, and the final balance spring 1 is produced by assembly in a common collet or directly on a balance 2. Advantageously, each stage 10 then includes angular indexing means arranged to cooperate in a complementary manner with complementary angular indexing means comprised in the other stages, to form together a compound balance spring 1 with a fixed, perfectly reproducible geometry.
The invention is illustrated, in
One particular application, illustrated by
In a simple variant of the invention with two stages, illustrated in
To avoid overloading
The invention can be used both in an arrangement with a single stud 3, with which all the superposed stages cooperate, and in an arrangement where one particular stud corresponds to each stage 10. It is this variant that is illustrated in
Thus, each stage can be adjusted independently of the others, and also attached independently of the others.
Preferably, these position adjustment means 50, of a given stage 10, include a plurality of discrete position adjustment positions 60, which form as many counting points.
In the simplified and non-limiting version illustrated by the Figures, these discrete positions correspond to U-shaped or similar housings 6, each arranged to retain one stud 3. Making the balance spring of micromachinable material allows for more complex geometries, in particular with omega or similar shaped housings forming a clamp, between flexible deformable walls, upon insertion of the stud in the housing selected by the watch adjuster or by a robot determining the optimum adjustment position, these walls then being arranged to retain the stud securely after insertion.
In the embodiment illustrated by
In the more complex embodiment illustrated by
The example of
Attachment means 40 and position adjustment means 50 therefore together form built-in isochronism correction means for balance spring 1.
In the specific application of
These elastic multi-arms 70 with several strips can more quickly change the stiffness of the various balance springs, with the change of angular position.
It is, however, possible to choose a simplified variant, not illustrated by the Figures, where it is only the relative position of the stud and of position adjustment means 50 of a determined stage that are adjusted. Position adjustment means 50 of a given stage 10 may thus include a plurality of elastic multi-arm assemblies 70, which are all of the same stiffness.
In the variant of
Preferably, discrete positions 60 are angularly offset with respect to the axis of the balance spring, by a constant pitch comprised between 4° and 12°.
In the example illustrated by
In the example illustrated by
In a particular variant, the respective attachment means 40 of at least two stages 10, in the free state, are superposed on each other.
Advantageously, to allow for differential adjustment of the various stages, and thus to better adjust the resulting stiffness of balance spring 1, at least two stages 10 include springs of a different stiffness from each other.
More particularly, at least two stages 10 include springs having a different section from each other.
Similarly, in a particular variant, at least two stages 10 include springs having a different active length from each other.
Also similarly, in a particular variant, at least two stages 10 include springs in different silicon oxidation states from each other, for example one in a non-oxidised silicon state, and the other in an oxidised silicon state.
In a particular variant, at least two stages 10 include springs wound in opposite directions. This is the case in all the Figures.
Preferably, the total stiffness of all the stages 10 wound in a first direction is equal to the total stiffness of all the stages 10 wound in a second direction, opposite to the first direction.
As a result of the invention, once the balance spring 1 is assembled, it is possible to modify the active attachment position, even when the balance spring is already assembled to a balance and inside a movement.
In this non-limiting variant of
This configuration of the invention can increase the stiffness of one balance spring stage by reducing the stiffness of the other balance spring stages accordingly, or vice versa. Also, in the particular and preferred case where the stiffness of the two most flexible springs is half the stiffness of the stiffest spring, the mean frequency remains the same, for all the configurations of attachment of the balance spring stages to stud 3.
In these different implementation variants of the invention, it is therefore possible to effect adjustment of the mean frequency and of the isochronous gradient.
In particular, when the means for attachment to a single stud are superposed, during modification of the active attachment, the stiffness of the two stages 10A and 10B of the illustrated variants changes in an opposite manner: the spring of one stage becomes stiffer, while the other becomes less stiff. The geometry of the two springs can thus be defined and adjusted, so that the total resulting stiffness, and thus the oscillation frequency of the sprung balance formed with a balance spring 1 according to the invention, barely changes during the procedure for adjustment of the isochronous gradient. In such case, the usual adjustment of the balance screws can still set the mean frequency of the sprung balance assembly.
Conversely, modification of the isochronous gradient as a function of the position of attachment remains important, and can correct manufacturing or assembly errors, for example adhesive bonding errors.
The invention also concerns a sprung balance assembly 100, comprising a balance 2 coupled with at least one such balance spring 1.
The invention also concerns an escapement mechanism 200, comprising at least one such sprung balance assembly 100, and comprising at least one stud 34 for fastening in position the outer end 30 of at least one said stage 10.
As explained above, in a first variant, at least one same stud 3 is arranged to fasten several outer ends 30 of different stages 10. Whereas in a second variant, escapement mechanism 200 comprises a separate stud 34 for fastening in position the outer end 30 of each stage 10.
The above explanation concerns the shape of the balance springs.
The solution of a particular, single or combined stud, may also, alone or in combination with these particular balance springs, provide an original solution to the problem of adjustment for isochronism.
Indeed, acting on the outer, angular and/or radial position of attachment, for a plurality of balance springs, can also control isochronism.
In particular, one may consider the variant with at least two independent studs, as seen in
Thus, in a particular variant, escapement mechanism 200 comprises at least one stud 3 whose position is movable and adjustable, for fastening in position the outer end 30 of at least one stage 10.
In a particular variant, escapement mechanism 200 comprises at least one stud 3 whose position is movable and adjustable, for fastening in position the outer end of at least one standard balance spring, i.e. comprising a single outer coil running on from the coils of the winding, in no particular arrangement, and of similar or identical section to that of the other coils. Naturally, this arrangement, which is applicable to a standard balance spring, is applicable to a multistage balance spring 1 as presented above.
More particularly, at least one such position adjustable stud is arranged to be capable of occupying one of a plurality of discrete positions in a bottom plate or a bridge comprised in escapement mechanism 200. In a particular embodiment, this stud can be fitted inside one housing or bore in an array of known position holes which are reproducible from one mechanism to another.
Of course, such a stud arrangement can be applied generally to several independent studs, and notably in a variant with as many independent studs as there are balance springs.
Various specific arrangements of the attachment between the stud and the balance spring are possible, in particular in an embodiment made of micromachinable material, which makes it possible to make the attachments in a different manner from the multiple arms explained above, in the form of washers, or hollow lugs, or suchlike, which are quite advantageous solutions for silicon balance springs. The washers or suchlike can be directly incorporated in the mask.
A first variant, shown in
In a second variant, shown in
In order to achieve temperature compensation of the oscillator, an advantageous variant, shown in
In a particular embodiment, escapement mechanism 200 has no index assembly.
The invention also concerns a mechanical timepiece movement 300 including at least one escapement mechanism 200 of this type.
The invention also concerns a watch 400 including at least one such mechanical timepiece movement 300.
In short, the invention allows the watchmaker to finely adjust the isochronism of a combined balance spring, made of a non-plastically deformable material, such as silicon derivatives, by replacing the index system normally used for a steel balance spring.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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15163808.7 | Apr 2015 | EP | regional |