The present invention relates to the field of horology. It concerns more specifically a correction device for a time indication display mechanism including a wheel fitted with two toothings located in the same plane. The invention also concerns said wheel itself.
Mechanisms displaying a time indication, such as the date, are known to those skilled in the art. They typically include a display member, such as a date ring, a mechanism driving the display member, and a correction device activated by a winding stem. Correction devices are generally complex and cumbersome. They typically include at least one intermediate wheel activated by a pinion mounted on the winding stem, and a sliding or stationary corrector pinion, meshed with the intermediate wheel and with the display member.
A major drawback of this type of correction device is its thickness, mainly due to the intermediate wheel which includes two toothing levels. By way of example, JP Patent No 59 160791 may be cited, wherein the intermediate wheel includes a first toothing level meshed with the pinion of the winding stem, and a second toothing level meshed with a second intermediate wheel. In JP Patent No 48 35856, the intermediate wheel is arranged as a overthickness of the winding stem pinion. It includes a contrate toothing meshed with the pinion, and a radial toothing meshed with the corrector pinion. Further, the corrector pinion also includes two active levels. Because of their thickness, these devices are not suited to ultra-thin movements.
Other correction devices, of much simpler design, include a pinion mounted on the winding stem, directly meshed with a toothing of the display member. The pinion therefore includes two substantially helical wings, arranged for cooperating in one direction of rotation only, with the toothing of the display member. The display member is generally positioned using a jumper spring. This type of correction device is certainly extremely simple, but it is cumbersome for display members of large diameter Indeed, the diameter of the pinion must be in ratio to the pitch of the display member toothing, so that each wing drives the display member through one step when the pinion rotates. The diameter of the pinion is, consequently, all the more important the larger the diameter of the display member, which is why this device is ill suited to ultra-thin movements.
The present invention proposes overcoming these drawbacks by providing a simple correction device with a minimum space requirement, mainly as regards thickness.
More specifically, the invention concerns a correction device for a timepiece display mechanism of the type including a display member fitted with a toothing of pitch P, the correction device including a pinion fitted with a toothing of pitch p, mounted on a winding stem so as to occupy at least one correction position, and an intermediate wheel mounted between the pinion and the display member. According to the invention, the intermediate wheel includes a main toothing of pitch P, of head diameter D, of foot diameter d1 meshed with the toothing of pitch P of the display member, and a secondary toothing of pitch p less than P, concentric to the main toothing, located in the same plane as the main toothing, of head diameter D equal to the head diameter d1 of the main toothing, and of foot diameter d2 greater than the foot diameter of the main toothing, meshed with the toothing of pitch p of the pinion when the pinion occupies the correction position.
Owing to the features of the intermediate wheel, the thickness of the correction device according to the invention does not exceed the diameter of the pinion. Moreover, as the pinion is not directly meshed with the display member as is the case of the pinion with wings that was described above, but with the second toothing of pitch p, the diameter and space requirement thereof are reduced.
The invention also concerns a timepiece wheel fitted to this correction device.
More specifically, the invention concerns a substantially plane timepiece wheel including a first toothing defined by a pitch P, a head diameter D and a foot diameter d1, including at least one tooth provided with a tip that extends substantially angularly. According to the invention, the tip portion of the first teeth is cut so as to form a second coplanar toothing concentric to the first toothing, said second toothing being discontinuous, defined by a pitch p less than pitch P of the first toothing, a head diameter D equal to the head diameter of the first toothing, and a foot diameter d2 greater than the foot diameter d1 of the first toothing.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly upon reading the following detailed description of an example embodiment of the display mechanism correction device according to the invention, said example being given solely by way of non limiting illustration, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
Designated by the general reference number 10, the correction device shown in
Correction device 10 includes, in a conventional manner, a winding stem 24 mounted to move in rotation in plate 18 and provided, at the external end thereof, with a winding crown that is not shown. Winding stem 24 is slidably mounted so as to occupy a neutral position, in which it is pushed in as far as possible, and two active positions, which are first and second pulled out positions. A sliding pinion 26 is secured in rotation to winding stem 24. Winding stem therefore has a square section on one portion occupied by sliding pinion 26. Sliding pinion 26 has a hole that is adapted in shape and size to the section of winding stem 24. It further includes at a first end thereof a first straight contrate toothing 28, and at a second end, a second contrate toothing 30 of pitch p. Said second contrate toothing 30 is straight, but other toothing shapes could be envisaged, as will appear below.
Sliding pinion 26 is activated conventionally by a mechanism formed of a pull out piece 32 and a lever 34 cooperating with each other to pass the pinion from a neutral position, when winding stem 24 is in a neutral position, to a time indication correcting position A, when winding stem 24 occupies a first pulled out position, then to a time setting position B, when winding stem 24 occupies the second pulled out position. This mechanism activating sliding pinion 26 is well known to those skilled in the art and will not be described further.
In the time setting position B, sliding pinion 26 meshes, via the first toothing 28 thereof, with intermediate wheel 36, kinematically connected to a cannon pinion that is not shown. The time can be set by activating winding stem 24, in either direction of rotation.
In the time indication correcting position A, sliding pinion 26 meshes, via the second toothing 30 thereof, with a correction wheel 38 mounted to rotate freely on holding plate 22. Correction wheel 38 is itself meshed with toothing 16 of display member 12. The assembly formed by winding stem 24, sliding pinion 26, correction wheel 38 and display member 12 is shown in
Correction wheel 38 includes a first toothing 40 of pitch P, of head diameter D, and foot diameter d1. Toothing 40 meshes with toothing 16 of display member 12. Thus toothing 40 is completely complementary to toothing 16. It is formed of teeth 42, of width S, equal to the width of the space between two consecutive teeth 17, separated by a space of width s=P−S, equal to the width of teeth 17.
Teeth 42 further include two substantially radial flanks and a tip 44 that extends substantially angularly. Tip 44 is cut so as to form a second toothing 46, which is discontinuous, coplanar and concentric to first toothing 40, of pitch p less than pitch P of the first toothing, of head diameter D equal to the head diameter of first toothing 40 and of foot diameter d2 greater than the foot diameter d1 of first toothing 40. Toothing 46 meshes with the contrate toothing 30 of sliding pinion 26.
It will be noted that toothing 46 has large discontinuities, because it is only present at tip 44 of teeth 42 of the first toothing 40. However, in order for correction device 10 to operate properly, the second toothing 46 must be meshed, at least via one tooth, with contrate toothing 30 of sliding pinion 26. Therefore, the spaces of width s separating two consecutive teeth 42 are as small as possible. In practice, they cannot be less than the width s of teeth 17 forming toothing 16 of display member 12. Consequently, one must ensure that the width s of teeth 17 of display member 12 is as small as possible.
When winding stem 24 is activated, as sliding pinion 26 is in position A, the latter drives correction wheel 38 in rotation, which itself drives display member 12, in one direction of rotation or the other. The time indication is thus corrected.
In the embodiment presented above, contrate toothing 30 and second toothing 46 are straight, which allows coupling in both directions of rotation. In a particular embodiment illustrated in
Correction device 10 thus described is extremely simple and compact. It is perfectly suited to an ultra-flat movement of the mechanical or electromechanical type.
It goes without saying that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments that have just been described and that various simple alterations and variants could be envisaged by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined by the annexed claims. It will be noted in particular that a correction wheel 38 that comprises only one tooth 42, wherein one tip portion 44 extends angularly and is cut so as to form a second toothing 46, coplanar and concentric to the first, is within scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07105669.1 | Apr 2007 | EP | regional |