Information
-
Patent Grant
-
4209971
-
Patent Number
4,209,971
-
Date Filed
Thursday, April 20, 197846 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 1, 198044 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Truhe; J. V.
- Pojunas, Jr.; Leonard W.
Agents
- Burns; Robert E.
- Lobato; Emmanuel J.
- Adams; Bruce L.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 058 23 A
- 058 23 D
- 058 23 BA
- 058 23 R
- 058 152 H
- 340 373
- 340 636
- 340 663
- 340 672
- 318 696
- 318 685
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An electronic timepiece comprises a detection circuit provided with a resistance element which discriminates rotation and non-rotation of a stepping motor by variation of an oscillating circuit, a dividing circuit, a pulse composing circuit, a stepping motor driving circuit, a two phase driving system stepping motor and an inductance, wherein said resistance element is directly connected across a coil output of the stepping motor within an integrated circuit.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
A conventional display mechanism of an analogue quartz crystal wrist watch is composed as shown in FIG. 1.
An output from a motor composed of a stator 1, a coil 7 and a rotor 6 is transmitted to a fifth wheel and pinion 5, a fourth wheel and pinion 4, a third wheel and pinion 3, a second wheel and pinion 2, and thereafter the output is transmitted to a cannon pinion, a cannon wheel, a calender mechanism though not shown to thereby drive a second wheel, a minute wheel, an hour wheel and a calendar. Though a load upon a stepping motor of a wrist watch is very small except when the calendar is advanced, for instance, the load of 1.0 g-cm torque is present in the case of a center wheel and pinion, however, twice as much torque is necessary in the case when the calendar is advanced. Accordingly, there is a problem that a power to stably drive the calendar mechanism is usually supplied though it takes no more than six hours to advance the calendar in 24 hours, by the reasons mentioned above.
The circuit composition of the conventional electronic watch is shown in conjunction with FIG. 2.
A 32.768 KHz signal of an oscillating circuit 10 is transduced to one second signal by a to dividing circuit 11. The one second signal is transduced into a signal of 7.8 msec in width, with a 2 second period by a pulse width composing circuit 12 and is applied to inputs 15, 16 of inverters 13a, 13b, there is fed the signal of the same period and the same pulse width, whereby an inverted pulse, the direction of current flow of which changes each second is applied to a coil 14, and thereby the rotor 6, two poles of which are magnetized and it rotates in one direction.
FIG. 3 shows a current wave form of the coil. Thus, the driving pulse width of the conventional electronic wrist watch is settled by taking a maximum torque as a standard, whereby the power is wasted during the time period which does not require a large torque and as a result a reduction of the electric power consumption is not realized.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Therefore, the present invention aims to eliminate the above noted difficulty and insufficiency, wherein the motor is driven with a smaller pulse width than the conventional type, and thereafter a detection pulse is applied to the coil to thereby examine whether the rotor rotates or not. The rotation of the rotor is detected by the voltage level of a resistance element inserted in series with the coil, and if the rotor doesn't rotate, the motor is driven with a wider pulse width to thereby correct the time.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a top view of an indicating mechanism of an analogue electronic timepiece,
FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a circuit composition of a conventional electronic timepiece,
FIG. 3 is a wave form diagram of current in a coil,
FIG. 4 is a diagrammatic view of one operational principle of a stepping motor,
FIG. 5 is a diagrammatic view of another principle of a stepping motor,
FIG. 6 is a diagrammatic view of a further operational principle of a stepping motor,
FIG. 7 is a wave form diagram of the current in the coil,
FIG. 8 is a graph of the driving pulse width of a motor with respect to electric current & torque,
FIG. 9 is a block diagram showing an electronic timepiece according to the present invention,
FIGS. 10(a ) and 10(b) are respectively a block diagram and a time chart of an embodiment of a pulse composing circuit of the invention,
FIGS. 11(a) and 11(b) are respectively an embodiment of a circuit diagram and a time chart of a pulse composing circuit, detection circuit and a driving circuit,
FIG. 12 shows a characteristic of the voltage drop of the detection resistance for an hour,
FIG. 13 is a second embodiment of a detection circuit of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The preferred embodiments of the present invention are now discussed in conjunction with the drawings.
FIG. 9 is a block diagram of an electronic timepiece according to the present invention, wherein numeral 51 represents a quartz crystal oscillating circuit which oscillates to generate the signal used for a reference signal of the timepiece. A dividing circuit 52 is composed of flipflops of multiple steps which divide the oscillating signal of the quartz crystal into a one second signal necessary for the timepiece. A pulse composing circuit 53 composes a normal driving pulse signal having a time width necessary for driving under normal load, a correction driving pulse signal necessary for correction driving under worst care loading and a detection pulse necessary for detection out of each of the flipflop outputs of the dividing circuit 52. Further, the pulse composing circuit 53 combines the above signals to thereby transduce into the signal suitable for actuating a driving circuit 54 and a detection circuit 56.
The driving circuit 54 drives a stepping motor 55 receiving a normal driving pulse signal produced from the pulse composing circuit 53.
The detection circuit 56 receives the detection pulse produced from the pulse composing circuit 53 to detect the rotation and non-rotation of the stepping motor 55 and the result is fed back to the pulse composing circuit 53.
A rotor of the stepping motor 55 rotates in the case of a light load by the application of the normal driving pulse, while the rotor does not rotate in the case of heavy load. When the detection signal is applied to the detection circuit 56, the rotation and non-rotation of the rotor can be detected by the difference between the coil inductances caused by the rotation and non-rotation of the rotor. The pulse composing circuit 53 receives the signal produced from the detection circuit 56 and applies the correction driving pulse to the driving circuit 54 when the rotor does not rotate.
The pulse width of the correction driving pulse is wider than the normal pulse and thereby the torque is large and the correction driving pulse can drive even under heavy load.
The rotation principle and the detection principle of rotation and non-rotation of the stepping motor used for an electronic wrist watch according to the present invention is explained hereinafter.
In FIG. 4, numeral 1 represents a stator composed as one body with saturable portions 17a 17b made to be easily saturated and which magnetically fits with a magnetic coil around which a coil 7 is wound, though not clearly shown in the drawing. On the stator there is provided a notch 18a, 18b to decide a rotating direction of the rotor 6 which is magnetized on two poles. FIG. 4 shows the state just after an electric current is applied to the coil 7. When the electric current is not applied to the coil 7, the rotor 6 is inactive at the position where the notch 18a, 18b is at about a right angle with the magnetic core of the rotor. If the electric current is applied to the coil 7 in the direction shown by the arrow, a magnetic pole is generated on the stator 1 as shown in FIG. 4 and the rotor repulses and rotates CW. When the current in the coil is cut off, the rotor 6 is inactive in the state where the magnetic pole is in reverse with FIG. 4. Thereafter, the rotor 6 continues to rotate CW in turn by the current flow through the coil 7 in reverse direction.
The stepping motor used in the electronic wrist watch according to the present invention is composed of a stator formed as one body and having saturable portions 17a, 17b whereby the current wave form in the coil 7 shows a gentle rising characteristics as shown in FIG. 3. This is because the magnetic resistance of the magnetic circuit to be measured from the direction of the coil 7 is very low until the saturable portion of the stator 1 saturates, and thereby a resistance R and the time constant .tau. of a coil series circuit becomes large. The above explanation is formulated as follows:
.tau.=C/R, L.apprxeq.N.sup.2 /Rm .tau.=N.sup.2 /(R.times.Rm)
where L: inductance of the coil 7, N: number of turns of the coil 7, Rm: magnetic resistance. When the saturable portions 17a, 17b of the stator 1 saturate, the magnetic permeability of the saturated portions become the same as that of air, whereby Rm increases, the time constant .tau. of the circuit becomes smaller and the current wave form abruptly rises as shown in FIG. 3. The detection of rotation and non-rotation of the rotor 6 used in the electronic watch according to the present invention is understood as the difference between the resistance and the time constant of the coil series circuit.
The reason for the difference in the time constant will now be explained.
FIG. 5 shows the state of the magnetic field when there is a current in the coil 7, wherein the magnetic pole of the rotor 6 is at the rotatable position. A series of magnetic flux lines 20a the magnetic flux generated from the rotor 6 and though not shown in the drawing, the magnetic flux interlocks with the flux generated by the coil. Magnetic flux lines 20a and 20b transverse the saturable portions 17a and 17b of the stator 1 in the direction of the arrows in FIG. 5. In many cases the saturable portions 17a, 17b do not saturate. In this state the current is started in the coil 7 as shown by way of the arrows in order to rotate the rotor CW. Magnetic fluxes 19a, 19b caused by the coil 7 and the magnetic fluxes caused by the rotor 6 respectively strengthen each other, whereby the saturable portions 17a, 17b saturate immediately. After this the magnetic flux sufficient to rotate the rotor 6 is generates from the rotor 6 though not shown in FIG. 5. The wave form of the current in the coil 7 in that instant is shown by way of numeral 22 in FIG. 7.
FIG. 6 shows the state of the magnetic flux in the case where the rotor 6 turns back halfway by some reason or other and the current is present in the coil 7. Though the current in the coil 7 is to be flowing in the reverse direction of the arrows in FIG. 6, i.e. the same direction with the arrows in FIG. 5 originally, because of the inverted current, the direction of the current changes per one rotation, is applied to the coil 7, and the magnetic flux in the case where the rotor cannot rotate is as shown in the drawing. The direction of the magnetic flux caused by the rotor 6 is the same as FIG. 5 since the rotor 6 does not rotate. The current in the coil 7 is in the reverse direction of that of FIG. 5, whereby the direction of the magnetic flux is as designated by 21a and 21b. The magnetic fluxes caused by the rotor 6 and the coil 7 cancel each other at the saturable portions 17a and 17b of the stator 1 and thereby it takes a longer time to saturate the saturable portion of the stator 1. The wave form 23 shows the condition as mentioned above. According to the embodiment, in a stepping motor with the diameter of the coil wire: 0.23 mm, number of turns: 10000, coil DC resistance: 3K.OMEGA., rotor diameter: 1.3 mm and the minimum width of the saturable portion: 0.1 mm, the time difference D in FIG. 7 until the saturable portion 17 of the stator 1 saturates is 1 msec. As clarified by a couple of electric current wave forms 22 and 23 in FIG. 7, the inductance in the coil is small when the rotor rotates and is large when the rotor does not rotate, within the range C. In the steppping motor of the above mentioned specification, the equivalent inductance within the range D is L=5 henry in the current wave form 22 when the rotor 6 rotates and L=40 henry in the current wave form 23 when the rotor 6 doesn't rotate. If the coil DC resistance R.OMEGA.and the resistance r.OMEGA.as the passive element for detection are connected with the inductance in series and altogether connected with the power source VD, the variation of the inductance is easily detected by detecting the voltage developed across the resistance element for detection as the threshold voltage Vth of a C MOS gate, i.e. the voltage 1/2 VD. The following equation is lead to by the voltage 1/2VD developed across the resistance r.
(1/2).multidot.VD=r/(R+r).multidot.[1-E.times.P(-(R+r).multidot.t/L].multidot.VD
If the values R=3K.OMEGA., =1 msec and L=40 henry are substituted for the above equation, r=29K.OMEGA.. On the other hand, since the saturation period of the current wave form 22 in FIG. 7 is about 0.4 msec, r is 7.1K.OMEGA. when the values R=3K.OMEGA., t=0.6 msec and L=5 henry are substituted for the above equation. Namely the resistance element for detection can range between 7.1K.OMEGA. and 29K.OMEGA.. The values calculated from the above equation coincide with experimental results.
Though the resistance element is used for the detecting element according to the embodiment of the present invention, it is to be understood that the passive elements such as a coil, condenser or the like and the active elements such as a MOS transistor or the like can be used as well.
As illustrated above, the rotation and non-rotation of the rotor 6 can be judged by the application of the detection signal, and thereby the motor ordinarily drives with low torque with a short pulse width, while the motor drives with high torque with a long pulse width for correction when the rotor 6 does not rotate under high load.
The pulse width is decided by the pulse width and curve lines of current and torque shown in FIG. 8 as follows:
Namely, the short pulse width t.sub.1 is determined by the minimum torque necessary for the normal stepping and the specification of the motor is chosen so that the motor drives at the maximum efficiency with the pulse width, thereby decreasing the current consumption as much as possible. The long pulse width t.sub.2 for the correction driving is chosen so that the value of the torque of which is at maximum which is guaranteed as a timepiece. As described so far, a timepiece of small power consumption in comparison with the conventional type is obtained by choosing the pulse widths t.sub.1 and t.sub.2.
Further, the feature of the detecting portion of the electronic timepiece according to the present invention is that the rotation and non-rotation of the stepping motor can be detected without using an amplifier in particular. The rotation and non-rotation of the stepping motor is detected as follows:
The resistance element the dc resistance value of which is the same or larger than the coil 7, is temporarily inserted into the coil 7 in series at the point S in FIG. 7 and then the voltage developed across the inductance of the coil 7 and the voltage of the resistance determined by the partial pressure ratio of the resistance is applied to a C MOS gate. The above method will be illustrated more detail later.
FIG. 9 shows the constitution diagram of the electronic timepiece as a whole.
Numeral 51 represents a quartz crystal oscillating circuit (OSC) in general. The signal from OSC 51 is fed to a dividing signal (DIV) 52 which is composed of multiple steps of flipflops (hereinafter F/F) and divides the signal into a one second signal which is necessary in a timepiece. A pulse composing circuit 53 feeds a normal driving pulse and a drive correction pulse to a driving circuit (DRIVER) 54 and a detection pulse to a detection circuit 56. A driving signal is fed to a coil portion of a stepping motor (MOTOR) 55 from the driving circuit (DRIVER) 54. The detection circuit 56 judges the rotation and non-rotation of the rotor 6 by inductance variation, and the detection circuit 56 feeds the signal to the pulse composing circuit 53 if it detects the non-rotation.
Referring now to the pulse composing circuit 53, the driving circuit 54 and the detection circuit 56 which constitute the main part of the present invention.
FIG. 10 is a partial time chart of the pulse composing circuit 53 and the block diagram whereof, showing 1" pulse, 1" correction pulse and a timing of a detection pulse .phi..
These signals can easily be composed of the composition of the gates of the outputs Q.sub.n from the dividing circuit 52.
The logical formulas of the signals are shown below.
1" pulse=Q.sub.8 .multidot.Q.sub.9 .multidot.Q.sub.10 .multidot.Q.sub.11 .multidot.Q.sub.12 .multidot.Q.sub.13 .multidot.Q.sub.14 .multidot.Q.sub.15
1" correction pulse=Q.sub.9 .multidot.Q.sub.10 .multidot.Q.sub.11 .multidot.Q.sub.12 .multidot.Q.sub.13 .multidot.Q.sub.14 .multidot.Q.sub.15
.phi.=Q.sub.5 .multidot.Q.sub.6 .multidot.Q.sub.7 .multidot.Q.sub.8 .multidot.Q.sub.9 .multidot.Q.sub.10 .multidot.Q.sub.11 .multidot.Q.sub.12 .multidot.Q.sub.13 .multidot.Q.sub.14 .multidot.Q.sub.15
provided that Q.sub.5 : 1024 Hz, Q.sub.4 : 512 Hz . . . Q.sub.15 : 1 Hz.
Accordingly, the pulse width of each of the signals are: 1" pulse: 3.9 ms, 1" correction pulse: 7.8 ms and .phi.: 0.5 ms.
These signals are fed to the circuit in FIG. 11 which will be subsequently illustrated and converted into the signals suitable for driving the driving circuit 54 or the like.
FIG. 11 is an embodiment of the pulse composing circuit 53, the driving circuit 54 and the detection circuit 56, wherein numeral 100 represents a F/F which produces a 1/2 Hz signal and the outputs thereof are respectively connected with NOR gates 102 and 103, while the inverse outputs thereof are respectively fed to the first inputs of NOR gates 104 and 105.
To a NOR gate 101 there is fed the one second pulse and the one second correction pulse from an R-S F/F 112 in the case when the rotor does not rotate and the output is connected with the second input of the NOR gates 103 and 104.
The detection pulse .phi. which is a part of the pulse composing circuit in FIG. 10 is applied to the second input of the NOR gates 102 and 105 by way of the inverter 120.
The output from the NOR gate 102 is connected to the input of an N MOS FET 115 and the first input of an OR gate 106 and the input of an AND-OR gate 110.
The output from the NOR gate 103 is connected to the input of an N MOS FET 114 for motor driving and the second input of the OR gate 106.
The output from the NOR gate 104 is connected to the input of an N MOS FET 119 for motor driving and the first input of an OR gate 107.
The output from the NOR gate 105 is connected to the input of an N MOS FET 16 and the second input of the OR gate 107 and the AND-OR gate 110.
The output from the OR gate 106 is connected to a P MOS FET 113 for motor driving and the output from the OR gate 107 is connected to a P MOS FET 118 for motor driving.
The one second correction pulse is fed to the reset terminal of the R-S F/F 112 from a terminal 131 by way of an inverter 121.
The above is the composition of a part 53-b of the pulse composing circuit and the composition of the driving circuit 54 and the detection circuit 56 is now referred to.
Numeral 134 represents a + terminal of the power source, applied whereto the supply voltage VD and sources of the P MOS FETs 113 and 118 are respectively connected.
The sources of the N MOS FETs 114 and 119 are grounded, while the drains of the P MOS FET 113 and N MOS FET 114 are connected to each other and also respectively connected to an end of a coil 155 of the stepping motor 55 and the drain of the N MOS FET 115 for detection.
The drains of the P MOS FET 118 and the N MOS FET 119 are connected to each other and further connected to the other end of the coil 155 of the stepping motor 55 and the drain of the N MOS FET 116 for detection.
The source of the N MOS FET 115 is grounded and the drain whereof is connected to a junction of the P MOS FET 113, the N MOS FET 114 and the coil 155 by way of a resistance 117-a. The N MOS FET 116 is connected to a junction of the P MOS FET 118, N MOS FET 119 and the coil 155 by way of a resistance element 117-b.
The voltage across the coil is fed to the AND-OR gate 110 and the output therefrom is fed to the setting terminal of the R-S F/F 112.
The operation of the circuit composition as mentioned above is as follows:
When the output Q of the F/F 100 is "H", the output from the NOR gate 101 is "L" and to input terminals of the NOR gate 104 there are fed "L" signals and then the output from the NOR gate 104 is "H", and the output from the OR gate 107 is "H", and thereby the P MOS FET 118 is OFF and the N MOS FET 119 is ON.
At this time the current flows through the coil 155 and the motor rotates. The similar operation will be explained when the output Q of the F/F 100 is "L", in which the N MOS FET 114 is ON and the current flows through the opposite direction as above and the motor rotates.
When the detection pulse .phi. is applied to the terminal 132, when the output Q of the F/F 100 is "H", the output from the NOR gate 105 is "H" and the signal flows through the P MOS FET 113, the coil 155, the resistance element 117-b, the N MOS FET 116, to the ground in series and the voltage in proportion to the current develops across the N MOS FET 116 and the resistance element 117-b.
Accordingly, the wave form of the rotor rotating with 1" pulse is as shown by way of 151 in FIG. 12 and the wave form whereof when the rotor does not rotate is as shown by way of 150 in FIG. 12, and by setting the threshold voltage of the C-MOS gate 110 at the center of the voltage at 0.5 msec, the nonrotation signal of the rotor is easily produced from the comparator. If the rotor does not rotate, the output from the AND-OR gate 110 is "H" and the R-S F/F is set and the output Q is "H" and continues the correction driving until the output Q is set by the 1" correction pulse.
The operation explained in the same way in the case where the output Q of the F/F 100 is "L". Moreover, the detection circuit 56 according to the present invention can also be achieved by the circuit composition as shown in FIG. 13. In the circuit composition, the gate of an N MOS FET 215 is connected to the output terminal of the NOR gate 102 in FIG. 11(a) and the gate of an N MOS FET 216 is connected to the output terminal of the NOR gate 105 in FIG. 11(a). The drain of the N MOS FET 215 is connected to one end of the coil 155 and the drain of the N MOS FET 216 is connected to the other end of the coil 155.
The source of the N MOS FET 215 and 216 are connected each other and one end of a resistance element 217 for detection is connected with a junction of the N MOS FETs 215 and 216 and the other end of the resistance element 217 is grounded. The junction of the N MOS FETs 215 and 216 is also connected to a C MOS gate 210 and the output thereof is connected to a C MOS gate 211 and further the output thereof is connected to the setting input of the R-S F/F 112 in FIG. 11(a). The operation of the detection circuit mentioned above is almost the same as the detection circuit 56 in FIG. 11(a) and when the detection pulse .phi. is applied to the detection circuit, the voltage wave form is the same as that of FIG. 12 developed across the resistance element 217.
The difference between the conventional detection circuit in FIG. 13 and the detection circuit 56 in FIG. 11(a) according to the present invention is the size when it is mounted on an IC and the resistivity of the ON resistance of N MOS FET.
By way of example, the size of the N MOS FETs 215 and 216 in FIG. 13 and the size of the N MOS FETs 115 and 116 in FIG. 11 (a) when they are mounted on IC are compared.
In FIG. 13, if the electric potential of the source of the N MOS FETs 215 and 216 is one half of the supply voltage, i.e. 1.57 V/2, the threshold voltage thereof is 0.5 V and the ON resistance thereof is 1K.omega., and the resistance of resistance element 217 is 15K.omega., the current flowing into the N MOS FETs 215 and 216 is:
i=1.57/2.times.15000=52.3 (.mu.A)
and the electric potential between the drain and source VDS is:
VDS=1000(.omega.).times.52.3(.mu.A)=0.0523(V)
whereby K value (.mu.A/V.sup.2) is:
K=i(.mu.A)/[2(VD-VSB-VTH).times.VDS-VDS.sup.2 ]
provided that,
VD (the supply voltage)=1.57(V)
VSB (the electric potential between the source and board)=1.57/2(V)
VDS (the electric potential between the source and drain)=0.0523(V)
i (the current flows across the drain and source)=52.3 (.mu.A)
K.apprxeq.2000 (.mu.A/V.sup.2)
if K =K'W/(L-2Xj), K' of N MOS FET.apprxeq.20 (.mu.A/V.sup.2) and L(length)=10 (.mu.), and 2Xj (diffused width)=8 .mu., W(width).apprxeq.500 (.mu.) Namely, the width of the N MOS FET 215 plus the N MOS FET 216 is 1000.mu..
Similarly, the size of the N MOS FETs 115 and 116 in FIG. 11(a) is calculated. If VSB=0 is substituted for the above equation, the ON resistance of the N MOS FETs 115 and 116 are both 1K.omega., and the resistances of resistance elements 117-aand 117-b are both 14K.omega., K.apprxeq.480 (.mu.A/V.sup.2), W(width)=120 (.mu.), whereby the size of the N MOS FETs 115 and 116 are 240 (.mu.) in all.
On the other hand, though two resistance elements 117-a and 117-b are necessary in case of FIG. 11(a), the area occupied by the resistors is small if a P-Well diffusion resistance, the shield resistance of which, is 5K.omega. is used and also the areas occupied by the gates are small since the increase in number of gates is small.
The area occupied by IC 10 (.mu.).times.100 (.mu.) is very large, whereby the method shown in FIG. 13 has disadvantages with respect to the cost and decrease in yield, on the other hand, the method shown in FIG. 11 improves the above mentioned disadvantages and achieves the decrease in a power supply of the electronic timepiece.
Moreover, it is to be understood that the electronic timepiece comprising a motor, the coil inductance of which is different according to the condition of the rotor, i.e. whether the rotor rotates or not rotates, is included in the present invention.
Claims
- 1. An electronic timepiece comprising: a stepping motor having a rotor and a coil; a detection circuit having a resistance element for discriminating between rotation and non-rotation of the stepping motor by variation of the coil inductance; a dividing circuit receptive of a time base signal for dividing the same down; a pulse composing circuit for generating a normal driving pulse for the stepping motor sufficient to drive the same under normal loading and insufficient to drive the same under worst case loading, a correction driving pulse sufficient to drive the motor under worst case loading and a detection pulse applied to said detection circuit; a stepping motor driving circuit receptive of the normal driving pulse and the correction driving pulse; and means connecting said resistance element directly across the coil output of the stepping motor such that said detection circuit controls the driving circuit to supply the correction pulse to the coil when the non-rotating condition is detected.
- 2. The electronic timepiece according to claim 1; wherein said resistance element and the remaining detection circuitry comprise one integrated circuit.
- 3. The electronic timepiece according to claim 2; wherein the detection circuit comprises two switching elements in series with the two ends of the coil with the resistance element connected at one end to the function of the two switching elements and at the other end to ground, and a CMOS element having its input connected to the junction for sensing the voltage drop across the resistance element.
- 4. The electronic timepiece according to claim 2; wherein the resistance element includes two resistors in series with the ends of the coil; said detection circuit further comprises two switching elements connected in series with the resistors and ground; and an AND-OR gate having its inputs connected to the junction points of the coil and the resistors.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
52-47093 |
Apr 1977 |
JPX |
|
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
4150536 |
Nakajima |
Apr 1979 |
|