This is a National Phase Application in the United States of International Patent Application No. PCT/EP01/03345 filed Mar. 21, 2001. The entire disclosure of the above patent application is hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a mechanism for triggering a striking work fitted to a timepiece, the latter including a strike train actuated by a barrel.
Timepieces fitted with a mechanism triggering a striking work from a strike train actuated by a barrel are well known in the state of the art. It is mainly timekeepers striking the hour, half-hour and quarter-hour at the user's demand, when he actuates a push-button fitted to the timepiece. In more complicated timepieces, called repeater watches, it is even possible to strike the minutes.
However, to the Applicant's knowledge, there has never been proposed a striking work that alerts the person wearing the timepiece at the end of a countdown of a period stored in a timer.
In order to fill this gap, the present invention is characterised in that the mechanism for triggering the striking work is arranged between a timer for counting down and displaying on a dial a predetermined time interval, and the strike train for making said striking work heard when the timer reaches the end of the countdown.
The invention will now be explained in detail hereinafter by an embodiment given by way of example, this embodiment being illustrated by the annexed drawings, in which:
In the timepiece taken as an example, minute counter 11 is also used as a timer or countdown counter 11, the setting of the period to be counted down being conferred on crown 37. The timer is started and a barrel actuating a striking work indicating the end of the countdown is wound by pressing on a third push-button 38. As
As
According to the invention, a striking work trigger mechanism 9 is arranged between timer 11 for counting down and displaying on dial 13 (see
As can be clearly seen in
One way of making this trigger mechanism will now be described in detail. Reference will be made for this purpose to
Timer 11 essentially includes a minute wheel 8 making one revolution in thirty minutes. This wheel is set to the desired time by crown 37 of the timepiece in accordance with a process that will not be described here. The set of hands 19, 20 and 21, displaying the selected time interval, are mounted onto shaft 18 of wheel 8, as mentioned hereinbefore. At the moment when third push-button 38 is pushed (see
It will be observed here that the mechanism shown in
Wheel 8 carries a plate 22 provided with a beak 6 and the first portion 16 of lever 1 carries a leaf spring 3 one end 23 of which is able to be contacted by beak 6 of plate 22. The second portion 17 of lever 1 carries a locking stone 2 co-operating with a notch 24 made in an end mobile 5 of strike train 14.
During the countdown, beak 6 of plate 22 is not in contact with end 23 of leaf spring 3, and stone 2 is engaged in notch 24 of mobile 5, thus locking strike train 14. It will be observed here that stone 2 is held engaged in notch 24 via the effect of a leaf spring 4, which presses on second portion 17 of lever 1, this pressing force being able to be adjusted by an adjustment device 28. By rotating device 28 in a direction F or G, this pressing force is respectively increased or decreased.
When timer 11 reaches the end of the countdown, beak 6 of plate 22 meets end 23 of leaf spring 3 and drives lever 1 in rotation, which has the effect of releasing stone 2 from notch 24. The strike train is thus released and points 42 forming part of the barrel 7 assembly start to rotate, which actuates the strike hammer as previously described. It will be noted here that a single point would be sufficient to emit a single sound. However, an arrangement of three points generating three brief, close sounds was preferred. It will also be noted that the force necessary to trigger the mechanism is very slight owing to the proposed device.
It will also be mentioned that end wheel set 5 of strike train 14 is a centrifugal governor which limits the rotational speed of the gear train and which acts as a brake on the kinematic chain. For this purpose, wheel set 5 carries two inertia blocks 43 and 44, which move apart when wheel set 5 is driven in rotation.
Plate 22 carrying beak 6 can be adjusted angularly with respect to minute wheel 8. This adjustment can occur by means of a screw 26. It will be understood that beak-trigger 6 has to be oriented with respect to toothing 27 of wheel 8 if one wishes to make the moment that the striking work is triggered coincide exactly with the zero indication shown on timer dial 13.
In the timepiece taken as an example, the countdown drives minute wheel 8 and beak 6, which is associated with it, in a direction A (clockwise). In this situation, when the beak contacts leaf spring 3, and more precisely end 23 of this leaf spring, the latter cannot bend as it is pressed against shoulder 29 of lever 1, which drives the lever in rotation and triggers the striking work mechanism.
When minute wheel 8 is driven in an opposite direction B (anti-clockwise) to that which it takes when counting down, particularly when it is used as a chronograph minute counter, leaf spring 3 will bend as shown at reference 3′ in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP01/03345 | 3/21/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/22/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/077722 | 10/3/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2113274 | Lux | Apr 1938 | A |
2554402 | Ditisheim | May 1951 | A |
3086352 | Jaccard | Apr 1963 | A |
3323303 | Jaccard | Jun 1967 | A |
3460339 | Schneider | Aug 1969 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
372989 | Nov 1959 | CH |
372 989 | Jul 1963 | CH |
12 10164 | May 1967 | CH |
199 12 320 | Sep 1999 | DE |
19912320 | Sep 1999 | DE |
783 990 | Jul 1935 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040090870 A1 | May 2004 | US |