This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. EP 04030204.4 filed Dec. 20, 2004, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention concerns an instrument for measuring intervals of time comprising a ringing mechanism. More specifically, the present invention concerns a timepiece comprising a chronograph mechanism. This type of timepiece can be either a pocket watch, a wristwatch, or a sports or industrial counter, which has the peculiarity of not indicating the current time and which is not only being used for measuring intervals of time.
The chronograph is a complementary mechanism, added to the movement of a watch, which measures the time elapsed during a sports event, industrial operations, laboratory experiments or any other application that requires timing an operation. An application of pressure on a push-button starts and stops the chronograph hand. An additional application of pressure on another push-button is used to return the hand to zero. Depending upon the degree of complication of the chronograph mechanism, one could also envisage restarting the mechanism after a temporary halt or a fly-back hand.
The drawback observed with the chronograph mechanisms that are currently available on the market is that they are started without any noise. This is particularly disadvantageous, for example for a sports coach, who will tend to look away from the athlete to ensure that his chronograph mechanism has actually started, a reflex which can cause measurement errors. The same is true for the measurement of any physical industrial or laboratory phenomenon. The person responsible for taking the measurement instinctively tends to look at the chronograph in order to ensure that it is working and stops looking at the phenomenon that he or she is supposed to be observing.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome this drawback in addition to others by providing a chronograph mechanism which enables its user to know whether the chronograph mechanism has been started properly without having to look away from the event whose duration has to be measured.
The present invention therefore concerns an instrument for measuring intervals of time comprising a chronograph mechanism, which is at least able to be started, stopped and reset to zero, this instrument being characterized in that it further includes a ringing mechanism which emits an acoustic signal at least when the chronograph mechanism is started.
Owing to these features, the present invention provides an instrument for measuring intervals of time that informs its user that the chronograph mechanism has been started by emission of a ringing sound. The user is thus informed audibly that the chronograph mechanism has been properly started and can thus keep his eyes on the event whose duration he wishes to time.
The ringing sounds at least when the chronograph mechanism is being started. It is, however, perfectly possible to envisage the ringing occurring when the user presses on a control member to stop the chronograph mechanism and/or to reset it.
For this purpose, and according to a complementary feature of the invention, the chronograph mechanism includes a column wheel associated with a control member which has teeth the number of which is equal to or twice the number of columns of the column wheel and which activates the ringing mechanism at least when the chronograph mechanism is started.
When the number of teeth of the control element is equal to the number of columns of the column wheel, the ringing only sounds when the chronograph mechanism is started, whereas if the number of teeth is equal to twice the number of columns, the ringing sounds when the chronograph mechanism is started and when it is stopped.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly from the following detailed description of an example embodiment of the instrument for measuring time intervals according to the invention, this example being given purely by way of non-limiting illustration, in conjunction with the annexed drawing, in which:
The present invention proceeds from the general inventive idea that consists in associating a conventional chronograph mechanism with a ringing mechanism that emits an acoustic signal at least when the chronograph mechanism is started and, preferably, also when said chronograph mechanism is stopped. The user who starts or stops the chronograph mechanism therefore benefits from an audible acknowledgement that enables him to be sure that said chronograph mechanism has worked properly without him having to take his eyes off the sports, industrial or other event that he has to time for a single moment. The accuracy of the measurement is therefore substantially increased.
The present invention will be described in relation to a wristwatch. It goes without saying that the invention can be applied to any type of timepiece such as, particularly, a pocket watch. More generally, the invention can be applied to any instrument such as a sports or industrial counter which comprises a time base but whose purpose is not to display the current time but only to measure an elapsed time.
The chronograph mechanism with which the ringing mechanism according to the invention is associated will not be described here in detail. It is in fact a conventional type chronograph mechanism with a column wheel that is well known to those skilled in the art. One will simply recall for the purposes of the present invention that this type of chronograph mechanism essentially includes a column wheel manufactured in a single piece and made up of a ratchet toothing and columns made perpendicularly to the toothing. When the chronograph mechanism is started, an operating lever hook rotates the ratchet of the column wheel through one step. At the same time, the beak of a coupling lever falls into a space between two columns, which causes a coupling wheel driven by the motion work to mesh with the chronograph wheel set. When the chronograph mechanism stops, the operating lever hook the operating lever hook again rotates the ratchet of the column wheel through another step. A brake-lever falls via its beak into a space of the column wheel and presses on the chronograph wheel set, stopping the latter. Simultaneously, the coupling wheel moves away from the chronograph wheel set. Finally, when the chronograph mechanism is reset, a hammer strikes a heart-piece fixedly secured to the chronograph wheel set, thus enabling the chronograph hand to return. For a complete description of a chronograph mechanism, reference can usefully be made to the collective work entitled “Théorie d'horlogerie” published in 1988 in Editions de la Fédération des Ecoles Techniques (Switzerland) which is incorporated herein by reference.
A first embodiment of a wristwatch according to the invention is shown in conjunction with FIGS. 1 to 3. Designated as a whole by the general reference numeral 1, this wristwatch includes a case 2 which houses a chronograph mechanism 4 and a ringing mechanism 6.
Chronograph mechanism 4 essentially includes a column wheel 10 pivoting on a plate 12. This column wheel 10 is manufactured in one piece and is formed of one toothing 14 called the ratchet and columns 16 made perpendicularly to toothing 14. Every time the chronograph mechanism is operated (start; stop; reset), an operating lever hook 18 causes ratchet 14 of column wheel 10 to rotate through one step clockwise.
Ringing mechanism 6 is mounted on a bridge 20 and essentially includes a strike hammer 22 pivoting on bridge 20 and capable of striking a gong 24 via its head 26. Two pins 28a and 28b, secured to strike hammer 22, respectively cooperate with an activating spring 30 and a return spring 32, the roles of which will be described hereinafter.
The chronograph mechanism 4 is kinematically linked to ringing mechanism 6 via a release lever 34 pivoting between bridge 20 and plate 12 and which has two diametrically opposite radial arms 36a and 36b. The position of release lever 34 is indexed by a jumper spring 38 which abuts via its beak-shaped free end 40 against an extension 42 of said release lever 34. More specifically, extension 42 has a flat portion 44 parallel to plate portion 46 of beak 40 of jumper spring 38.
A control element 48 is associated with column wheel 10. According to a first variant illustrated in
According to a second variant shown in
The operation of the mechanism described hereinbefore is as follows. When chronograph mechanism 4 is started, operating lever hook 18 rotates ratchet 14 of column wheel 10 through one step clockwise. At the same time, control element 48 causes release lever 34 to pivot anti-clockwise, a tooth 50 located at the apex of a column 16 abutting against arm 36a of said lever 34 and moving the latter away from its rest position against the return force of jumper spring 38. Likewise, release lever 34 moves strike hammer 22 away, via its arm 36b, from its rest position driving pin 28b against the return force of activating spring 30. Gradually as release lever 34 pivots, its arm 36a slides along the tooth 50 with which it is meshed until the moment when arm 36a escapes from said tooth 50. At that moment, activating spring 30 is let down abruptly and drives strike hammer 22 via pin 28b, against gong 24. The ringing sounds at the precise moment that operating lever hook 18 passes from one tooth of ratchet 14 to the next, which causes chronograph mechanism 4 to start. After hammer 22 has struck gong 24, it is returned to its rest position by return spring 32 which acts on pin 28b, whereas release lever 34 also returns to its rest position via the effect of jumper spring 38.
When chronograph mechanism 4 stops, operating lever hook 18 causes ratchet 14 to move forward one additional step. At that moment, arm 36a of release lever 34 is in a space between two successive columns 16. In the case where the number of teeth 50 is equal to the number of columns 16, the ringing will not sound when chronograph mechanism 4 stops. Conversely, if the number of teeth 50 is twice the number of columns 16, one of the teeth, integral with ring 52, will be in the space between the two columns 16, and ringing mechanism 6 will be released in the manner described hereinbefore when chronograph mechanism 4 stops.
A second embodiment of ringing mechanism 6 according to the invention is shown in
It goes without saying that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments that have just been described and that various simple modifications and variants can be envisaged by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the annexed claims. In particular, it is possible to envisage the teeth being arranged in a location along the height of the columns, rather than at the apex of the latter.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04030204.4 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |