This application claims priority to International Application No. PCT/EP2012/060825 filed Jun. 7, 2012; the entire content is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to an escapement device for clockwork, particularly for a wristwatch of the spiral balance type.
The escapement device in a mechanical watch is the master part designed, on the one hand, to deliver the necessary energy for maintaining the oscillatory motion of the mechanical oscillator, and on the other hand to transmit the frequency of oscillation to the gear train driving the time display.
The most widely used escapement device is currently the Swiss lever escapement. This type of escapement has been the subject of numerous studies and publications. The manual entitled “Théorie d'horlogerie” [Clockwork Theory], published by the Federation of Swiss Technical Schools, as well as the manual “Echappement et moteurs pas à pas” [Escapements and Stepping Motors] from the same publisher, describe in detail the operation of this type of escapement. The major drawbacks of this type of escapement are:
low efficiency: best efficiency is on the order of 30% to 40%;
manufacturing difficulties: to obtain the aforementioned efficiencies, the Swiss lever requires several highly precise final fine-tuning steps;
limited operating frequency: driving of the lever by the escape wheel is not tangential; during the mechanical impulse, the tooth of the escape wheel slides along the lever pallet, which leads to a wear problem for high operating frequencies.
To resolve the wear problem, patent EP 0 018796 A2 proposes a tangential drive type of escapement. The disadvantage of this type of escapement is the necessity of using two stacked wheels, which increases the inertia of the escapement and consequently reduces efficiency; moreover, the number of highly precise final fine-tuning steps is as great as that of a Swiss lever escapement.
Another type of tangential drive escapement well known in the literature is the detent escapement. This type of escapement has one active alternation, that is the escape wheel advances and delivers the mechanical impulse once per period of oscillation of the spiral balance wheel.
The aim of the present invention is to correct the flaws of the known escapements mentioned above by proposing a tangential drive escapement device with two active alternations per period of oscillation, with a single escape wheel and which nevertheless consumes less energy in its operation than the Swiss lever escapement.
To this end, the escapement as defined in Claim 1 has only one escape wheel and, thanks to the outside angles of each mobile which run from the locking face toward the driving face and which have the same direction as the principal direction of rotation of the escape wheel (during the impulse phase), the operation requires less energy because friction is reduced between the escape wheel and each mobile. In other words, the locking and driving faces of each mobile are arranged such that, during the driving or impulse phase, the escape wheel and the mobile then in contact with the escape wheel have opposite directions of rotation; the drive during the impulse phase is tangential. The escapement according to the present invention is therefore simple because it only has one escape wheel, but increases the operating reserve and can be used at high oscillation frequencies. It can also be noted that, according to this arrangement, transmission of energy from the escape wheel to the balance is effective.
In the present application, reference will be made to outside angles which are measured in the same direction as that traveled by the point of contact between the escape wheel and the mobile body considered. In the present application, this comes down to saying that the direction in which this angle is measured is opposite to the direction of rotation considered when releasing the escape wheel.
One embodiment of the escapement device according to the invention is shown in
an escape wheel 1 driven by the barrel through the transmission wheels; this escape wheel rotates about the axis 11 in the counter-clockwise direction;
a mobile 2 pivoting about the axis 21, comprising a first toothed structure with impulse faces 22 and locking faces 23 as well as a second toothed structure 24;
a mobile 3 pivoting about the axis 31, comprising a first toothed structure with impulse faces 32 and locking faces 33, a second toothed structure 34 and a third toothed structure 35.
Though it is not directly a part of the escapement device,
The following figures describe the principal operating steps of the escapement device according to the invention.
In this figure, the balance is turning clockwise. The toothed structure 42 of the balance is moving away from the toothed structure 35 of the mobile 3. The tooth of the escape wheel 1, under the influence of the barrel torque, exerts a force F on the locking face 33 of the mobile 3. This locking face 33 is arranged so that the direction of the force F passes substantially in proximity to the center of the mobile 3. Under these conditions, the escape wheel is locked and consequently immobilizes the mobile 3 and the mobile 2 by way of the toothed structures 24 and 34.
In this figure, the balance is turning counter-clockwise. The toothed structure 42 of the balance comes into contact with the toothed structure 35 and causes the mobile 3 to turn clockwise. This action frees the tooth of the escape wheel from the locking face 33. The necessary mechanical energy for disengaging is extremely small because it is used only to overcome the friction of the escape wheel on the locking face 33 and to displace the mobiles 2 and 3 a few degrees. In this application example, the angular displacement of the mobiles 2 and 3 during disengagement is about 4 degrees.
In this figure, the tooth of the escape wheel 1 presses on the impulse face 32 and drives the mobile 3 in the clockwise direction. The mechanical energy of the escape wheel is transmitted to the balance thanks to the toothed structures 42 and 35. The mobile 2 is also driven by the mobile 3 by the toothed structures 34 and 24. It is noted that, unlike a Swiss lever escapement, the driving of the mobile 3 by the escape wheel is substantially tangential to the trajectory of the impulse face 32.
The tangential driving of the mobile 3 by the escape wheel is obtained thanks to the particular arrangement of the faces 33 and 32 of the mobile 3.
The vector n33 represents the surface normal (hereafter called “normal”) to the locking face 33 at the locking point of the tooth of the escape wheel, the vector n32 represents the normal passing through the center of the impulse face 32 of the mobile 3 and α3 represents the outside angle between n33 and n32.
One of the particular characteristics of the escapement according to the invention is manifested by an outside angle α3 having the same sign as that of the angle of rotation of the escape wheel. In this exemplary embodiment, the outside angle α3 and the angle of rotation of the escape wheel are positive with respect to the trigonometric direction.
These characteristics are also found on the outside angle α2 between the normal n23 to the locking face 23 and the normal n22 to the impulse face 22 of the mobile 2.
By way of comparison,
It is observed that the outside angles αe and αs are of opposite sign to that of the angle of rotation of the escape wheel.
In this figure, the balance is turning counter-clockwise. The toothed structure 42 of the balance is moving away from the toothed structure 35 of the mobile 3. The tooth of the escape wheel 1, under the influence of the barrel torque, exerts a force F on the locking face 23 of the mobile 2. This locking face 23 is arranged so that the direction of the force F passes substantially in proximity to the center of the mobile 2; consequently, the escape wheel is locked and immobilizes the mobile 2 as well as the mobile 3 by way of the toothed structures 24 and 34.
The phases of engagement, of energy transmission and the end of the energy transmission when the balance is turning clockwise are manifest in similar fashion to those already presented when the balance is turning counter-clockwise.
The following figures illustrate these different phases:
After this energy transmission phase in the clockwise direction, the escape wheel is again locked at the locking face 33 and the operating cycle begins again.
It is observed that the escapement device according to the invention has two active alternations per period of oscillation of the spiral balance and that the escape wheel advances at each alternation by an angle equal to 180°/N, N being the number of teeth of the escape wheel; moreover, the same tooth of the escape wheel is successively locked on the locking face 33 and 23. It can be deduced that the angle between the locking points on the faces 33 and 23 with respect to the center of rotation of the escape wheel is also equal to 180°/N.
In this exemplary embodiment the locking face 23 consists of a plane the normal to which at the locking point passes substantially in proximity to the center of rotation of the mobile 2. It is also possible to obtain the same effect by replacing this plane by a cylindrical surface the cylinder axis whereof passes through the center of rotation of the mobile 2. However, if the abovementioned surfaces allow locking of the escape wheel, they do not make it possible to guarantee with precision the locking position, due to the rebound due to the impact between the tooth of the escape wheel and the locking face, at the end of the energy transmission phase and just before the rest phase.
To improve the precision of locking, a variant embodiment of the locking face 23, shown in
It will be understood that various modifications and/or improvements obvious to the person skilled in the art can be applied to the different embodiments of the invention described in the present description without departing from the scope of the invention defined by the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/060825 | 6/7/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/3/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/182243 | 12/12/2013 | WO | A |
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702 313 | Jun 2011 | CH |
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Entry |
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PCT/EP2012/060825 International Search Report dated Feb. 28, 2013 (4 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150131414 A1 | May 2015 | US |