The present invention concerns a hand or pointer comprising a part made of transparent material and capable of being illuminated so that the hand becomes luminous and visible even in the dark, in particular in an analogue display device such as a timepiece.
The invention also concerns an analogue display device for a timepiece, including such hands. The invention further concerns a watch including such a display device.
Currently, it is common to use a hand made of transparent coloured material which is illuminated internally so that it appears to be luminous, in particular to facilitate night reading of an analogue indicator such as the speedometer of an automobile. One can find for example in Patent publications Nos. WO 96/02810, U.S. Pat. No. 5,546,888 and DE 38 17 874, the description of devices in which a light beam, produced by a fixed source, axially penetrates a transparent rotating hub of the single hand and reaches a reflection surface which distributes the light into the elongated body of the hand. In order for the body of the hand to appear sufficiently and uniformly luminous, incorporating a fluorescent substance therein is known. However, the electric power consumption of these devices has limited their applications to date.
The idea of internally illuminating the hands of a timepiece for the same purpose is already an old one, but cannot be put into practice in the same way as in the aforementioned devices, particularly because of the coaxial arrangement of the hour, minute and possibly second hands, and the superposition of the circular heads of the hands. In order to reach the head of the top hand, the axial light beam has to pass through the head of each underlying hand, where the light flux has to be both divided and directed, on the one hand, towards the body of the hand, and on the other hand towards the overlying hand. Further, since the zone of the rotational axis is generally occupied by an opaque shaft, the light cannot pass into this zone, unless a transparent shaft is used. This thus results in particular difficulties for distributing the light.
In Swiss Patent No. 160 797 published in 1933, each of the two hands of a large clock is made in the form of a hollow housing with a light coloured or transparent bottom and a matt translucent cover. A group of three fixed lamps distributed around coaxial shafts for the hands produces an axial light beam which penetrates the head of each hand from the back, where a mirror distributes light towards the assembly of the bottom of the housing. The mirror of one of the hands is shifted in a radial direction with respect to the mirror of the other to avoid putting it in shadow. Thus, most of the light emitted by the lamps is lost because it passes to the side of the mirrors. Moreover, a construction of this kind with hollow hands is evidently too voluminous to be able to be applied to a watch.
Moreover, it has been proposed to illuminate the hands of a timepiece by means of electro-luminescent elements fixed to the transparent or translucent body of each hand (see for example U.S. Pat. No. 5,623,456). This system has the drawback of requiring rotating electric contacts which take a lot of space and are unreliable in the long term.
In the drawings of Japanese Patent No. 55-60894, one can see a timepiece with two coaxial luminous hands made of transparent material and having light-diffusing surfaces. The superposed circular heads of these hands are illuminated by an axial beam from a fixed source, opposite which the head of the hour hand has an annular groove with a semi-circular transverse profile. Above this groove, the top face of the head includes an annular raised portion provided with a light-diffusing surface for transmitting light towards a similar annular groove of the head of the minute hand. However, this construction has not had any commercial success, probably because of unsatisfactory light distribution in the hands.
In order to allow an analogue display by means of luminous hands in portable apparatuses where the available electric power is very limited, as in watches, there is thus a need for a device capable of assuring sufficient illumination of at least at part of each hand from one or more low power fixed light sources. In particular, with respect to the prior art, it is sought to increase the luminous output, i.e. the part of the light emitted by the source which is effectively reflected by the hands towards an observer. An additional object consists in arranging a hand made of transparent material so as to illuminate more particularly certain parts of the body of the hand, so that its position is clearly visible to the observer even if there is little power available to illuminate the hand.
Therefore, according to a first aspect, the present invention concerns a hand for an analogue display device, particularly in a timepiece, including a part made of transparent material which forms a body and a head of the hand, said head being centred with respect to a rotational axis of the hand and arranged to receive a light flux on its bottom face and to distribute at least a part of the flux into the transparent material, characterised in that the head of the hand includes a plurality of reflectors distributed in said head and arranged to reflect a part of said light flux towards the body of the hand.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a display device with luminous hands for a timepiece, including: a dial; coaxial hands disposed above the dial and each including a part made of transparent material which forms a head and body of a hand, the respective heads of the hands being superposed and fixed to respective shafts to rotate about a common rotational axis; and a stationary light source arranged to illuminate the set of hand heads from below by means of a light flux substantially parallel to the rotational axis; the device being characterised in that at least two of the hands are made in accordance with the first aspect of the invention. Preferably, in each hand individually considered, the reflectors are located at substantially the same distance from the rotational axis, but this distance is different from one hand to another to prevent a reflector of a lower hand entirely masking a reflector of the overlying hand.
Owing to these arrangements, the reflectors can advantageously be distributed in the head of the hand not only in proximity to the body of the hand, but also in the parts of the head located at a distance from the body. Intercepting a part of the axial light flux in this way on different regions of the contour of the hand head offers several advantages. The reflectors can have a larger total surface area and thus intercept more light than a reflector disposed opposite the body of the hand as provided by Patent document No. WO 96/02810. When the light source is formed by two or more elements of small size, spaced out from each other around the rotational axis, suitable distribution of the reflectors provides a reflected light intensity which varies less, during the rotation of the hand, than with a single reflector located facing the body. Further, certain of the reflectors can advantageously be oriented differently, which allows the light to be directed in a preferred manner towards certain regions of the hand, either to illuminate such regions more particularly, or to obtain sufficiently uniform distribution of the light taking account of the shape of the hand.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear from the description of a preferred embodiment, given hereinafter by way of non-limiting example with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
The watch movement can be of any type. If it is electronic, it can be mounted either on the bottom face of printed circuit board 20, or on another board located underneath.
Hands 11 and 12 are intended to be illuminated internally by light source 21, to facilitate reading the time and particular to make this possible in the dark. There is no illumination of the dial in the example shown here, but this can be provided, as will be explained hereinafter.
In
Hour hand 11 includes a central metal bush 26 and a part 27 (
Minute hand 12, disposed in a conventional manner above hour hand 11, also includes a central metal bush 32 and a part 33 made of transparent material (FIG. 3) including an elongated body 34 and a circular head 35 provided with a central hole 36 where bush 32 is fixed. This transparent part 33 can be made in the same way as part 27 of the other hand, with a head of the same size but a longer body. The top face of head 35 of the minute hand is covered with an opaque cap 37 which was omitted in
Several reflectors 40 are distributed in head 29 of hour hand 11, around central hole 30 of the head. In the present case, these reflectors are eleven in number and are all located at substantially the same distance R1 from rotational axis 15. Likewise, several reflectors 41 are distributed in head 35 of minute hand 12. In the present case, reflectors 41 are nine in number and are located at substantially at the same distance R2 from axis 15. This distance R2 is smaller than R1, so that each reflector 41 can still receive a part of the axial light flux from light guide 18 through hour hand 11, without any risk of being entirely in the shadow of one of reflectors 40 of the hand. This risk is also avoided by the fact that the number and distribution of the reflectors is different from one hand to the other. Each of reflectors 40 and 41 is preferably formed by an oblique surface of a dihedron or V-shaped hollow 43 (
In the example shown, the transparent part forming the body 28, 34 and the head 29, 35 of each hand is flat, so that the thickness of the head is the same as that of the body of the hand. Reflectors 40 and 41 can extend through the entire thickness of this part and are inclined at approximately 45° with respect to axis 15 and the light beam, to reflect the light from the latter towards the interior of each hand. In the plan views of
It will be noted that a hand such as that described here can also be made of cut polished glass.
Owing to the approximately 45° inclination of the reflectors, any light rays reaching a reflector from below in a substantially parallel direction to axis 15, undergoes a total internal reflection, provided that the refractive index of the transparent material is greater than √2, which is the case of PMMA, various types of glass and other transparent materials able to be used to make such hands. The total internal reflection allows more light energy to be led towards the body of the hand than could be achieved with metal reflectors. Light guide 18 can also be made of one of the aforementioned materials.
The three light-emitting diodes 23 are of small size and thus almost punctual Each of them emits light with a great predominance in the axial direction, i.e. parallel to axis 15. A part of the light that is not parallel to the axis can be reflected by total reflection inside guide 18 by the cylindrical faces of the latter. A reflective coating can be applied onto the lower part of the lateral surfaces of the guide, where the incident rays are to oblique to satisfy the total internal reflection condition. However, the intensity of the light leaving the upper surface of the guide in the direction of the hands is not uniform over the entire contour of the beam. The distribution of reflectors 40 and 41, as shown in
Since light guide 18 is fixed with respect to diodes 23, it is possible to give it an optical configuration tending to produce an optimum light beam at its output, either to make the luminous intensity uniform over the contour of the beam, or so that most of the light rays have an axial direction when they leave the guide. For example, the lower face of the guide can have, facing each diode, a shape producing a lens effect, particularly in the form of Fresnel lenses. Similar arrangements can be provided on the upper face of the guide.
It will be noted that it is in the top hand, here minute hand 12, that reflectors 41 are closest to axis 15, whereas reflectors 40 of the other hand are furthest from the axis. There are two reasons for this. First, hole 30 of bottom hand 11 is larger and thus it would be difficult for the reflected light to go around it if reflectors 40 were close to it. Secondly, since the intensity of the light in the axial beam is a little larger close to the interior, it is better to use this part of the beam to illuminate the top hand, given the dispersion and loss of light in the head of the bottom hand.
With such an arrangement, digital simulations have shown that it is possible to obtain excellent illumination intensity uniformity of each hand body during rotation, as well as good luminous output, this output being defined as the ratio between the light power passing through a cross section at the base of body 28, 34 of one of the two hands and the total luminous power of source 21. Output values of the order of 3.8% to 4.5% have been calculated with the arrangement shown, whereas the outputs obtained with reflectors located only opposite the body of the hand are close to only 2%.
In order to make clearly visible the position of each hand by means of the light thus reflected towards the interior of the transparent body of the hand, an advantageous solution consists in arranging light-diffusing surfaces at appropriate places, in particular on the lower face of the body. In the prior art, it was proposed to make such light-diffusing surfaces with a ground or granular surface structure of the transparent material. With the low light power available in the device described here, this embodiment of light-diffusing surfaces is not optimum, since the illumination of the surfaces remains too feeble.
A more efficient solution consists in making the body of the hand visible by means of one or more light-diffusing surfaces which are preferably inclined with respect to the general plane of the body, in order to receive light directly from the reflectors, and are covered with a white or coloured paint, or a fluorescent paint. The painted zones further facilitate daytime visibility of the hand.
In the variant shown in
The examples described hereinbefore can be subject to multiple modifications or variants without departing from the scope of the invention, as defined by the annexed claims. In particular, the number of luminous hands is not limited to two. For example, in a watch having a centre seconds hand, the latter can also be luminous and made in accordance with the principles explained hereinbefore, so that the same axial light beam illuminates the three coaxial hands. In another embodiment of the display device illustrated by
The plurality of reflectors distributed in the head of a hand according to the invention can also include reflectors disposed along the peripheral surface of the head of the hand with an inclination close to 45°. In this case, this peripheral surface will preferably have a serrated shape, so that the reflectors direct the reflected light towards the body of the hand.
Instead of being flat, the body of the hand can have a variable thickness, for example owing to a lower face which rises in the direction of the tip of the hand and which reflects the incident rays upwards. This longitudinally inclined face can also include light-diffusing surfaces.
Given that a thin hand body made of synthetic material is relatively deformable, particularly by the effects of heat, it can be made rigid by means of external or internal metal elements, for example a radial bar bonded to the central bush.
Instead of being formed by the three light-emitting diodes 23 described hereinafter, light source 21 can take other forms. Light sources of elongated or even annular shape can, in particular, be used, to assure better uniformity of the luminous intensity around the axis.
According to a variant that is not shown, dial support 16 could be made of transparent material and combined with guide 18 in order to lead a part of the light from source 21 underneath the dial to make certain openings in the dial and/or time markings disposed thereon luminous.
According to another variant, annular light guide 18 could be rotating and secured to the transparent part of the closest hand, in this case hour hand 11 in the example of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2281/01 | Dec 2001 | CH | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2290278 | Failla | Jul 1942 | A |
2831453 | Hardesty | Apr 1958 | A |
4274358 | Nakamura et al. | Jun 1981 | A |
4380043 | Takamatsu et al. | Apr 1983 | A |
4625262 | Sakakibara et al. | Nov 1986 | A |
4860170 | Sakakibara et al. | Aug 1989 | A |
4959759 | Kohler | Sep 1990 | A |
5142456 | Murphy | Aug 1992 | A |
5199376 | Pasco | Apr 1993 | A |
6025820 | Salmon et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6182601 | Baatz | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6379015 | Wilhelm et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
837 070 | Jun 1952 | DE |
732 788 | Sep 1932 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030112712 A1 | Jun 2003 | US |