This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 17196547.8 filed on Oct. 16, 2017; the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference
The invention concerns a method for cutting watch crystals along a contour in a plate of transparent material.
The invention concerns the field of watch crystals, more particularly made of hard material, such as sapphire, mineral glass or suchlike.
The manufacture of transparent timepiece components, and particularly front or back cover crystals, generally requires machining chamfers front and back on either side of an assembly edge, which are important especially for facilitating a press fit, for ensuring sealing, and for aesthetics. The handling of such components during their machining cycle is difficult, requiring precautions to prevent any scratching due to burrs or to machining waste from the material of the crystal and/or the tools used to manufacture said crystal, or due to handling.
The invention proposes to develop a method allowing to chamfer and cut crystals at high speed, especially circular crystals, from large plates of transparent material.
To this end, the invention concerns a method according to claim 1.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following detailed description, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
The invention concerns a method for cutting a timepiece crystal 1 along a contour 2 in a plate 3 of transparent material.
This transparent material is more particularly a hard material such as sapphire, mineral glass, particularly silicate, or a similar material; it may also be a polymer, called ‘organic glass’, or suchlike, this material is suitable for manufacturing visible components and more particularly watch crystals or watch back cover crystals.
According to the invention, the following steps are performed in succession and in this order:
In a particular embodiment, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, there is used a grinding wheel 18 or a bell tool whose profile corresponds to the chamfer to be formed, driven in rotation and plunged straight onto plate 3, if contour 2 is circular.
In a particular embodiment, suitable for any elliptical or similar crystal contour, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, there is used a grinding wheel 17 or a bell tool driven in rotation and effecting multi-axis contouring along contour 2, with the axis of rotation of the grinding wheel or of the bell tool moving through space perpendicularly to the plane locally tangent to the chamfer to be formed. This method can also be used to form chamfers on square or rectangular crystals, but then requires recesses to be provided for the tool around each corner, which may require optimised positioning of the crystals on plate 3, to avoid too much waste of material.
In another particular embodiment, if permitted by the material of plate 3, and particularly for organic materials, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, there is used a shank boring tool 19, mounted on a boring head driven in rotation and plunged straight into plate 3 when contour 2 is circular. In a variant, an end mill or side-and-face cutter can also be used.
Likewise, in another particular embodiment, depending on the material of plate 3, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, there is used a shank boring tool 19 driven in rotation and effecting multi-axis contouring along contour 2, with the axis of rotation of a bore head carrying the shank boring tool moving through space perpendicularly to the plane locally tangent to the chamfer to be formed.
Naturally, in variants in which a tool other than a grinding wheel is used, especially a shank boring tool or a mill, the active part of the tool concerned is preferably coated with a coating, especially with a diamond or similar coating, like those used in optics or in the spectacle industry.
Different tool or mill shapes can be used, depending on the shape of the contour to be chamfered: a continuous bell, discontinuous bell, tool with a single cutting edge such as a shank boring tool, or otherwise. The type of tool depends on the type of material to be chamfered, and may, in particular but not exclusively, be chosen from: diamond-coated, or boron nitride coated or otherwise, diamond mill or other.
In an advantageous variant, during first step 100, at least one machined marking 14 is made, and, during second turning-over step 200, plate 3 is placed on a tool 15 including at least one relief portion 16, which is arranged to cooperate with said at least one machined marking 14 to position plate 3 in a unique position, and plate 3 is immobilised on said tool 15 by clamping means and/or suction means and/or freeze clamping means.
In a variant, to ensure proper positioning of the plate when it is turned over, an optical alignment system can be implemented using optical means, such as a camera or suchlike, or otherwise. Holding can be achieved mechanically or using vacuum pressure.
More particularly, this at least one machined marking 14, and said at least one corresponding relief portion 16, each include a mutually complementary conical contact surface. This machined marking 14 may, in particular, be situated in an unused area that cannot be used for making crystals, such as a corner of plate 3, as seen in
In a particular embodiment, during fourth step 400, crystals 1 are separated from a skeleton 13 by a machining operation along contour 2 performed by a laser or water jet cutting, or by plunge grinding if contour 2 is circular, with a grinding wheel 18 or a bell tool with a straight internal profile driven in rotation and plunged straight onto plate 3. Separation by laser is well suited, and not limited to, the case of sapphire crystals, or to that of crystals made of mineral glass.
In a particular embodiment, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, each cut line is machined with a grinding wheel which is regularly cooled in a sharpening station disposed in immediate proximity to plate 3.
In a particular embodiment, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, monitoring means, such as a camera or other optical means, are used to check the surface condition of each chamfer once it is made, and, when it is observed that a predefined roughness or transparency threshold has been breached, the grinding wheel or tool is changed, or the grinding wheel or tool is sharpened in a sharpening station disposed in immediate proximity to plate 3.
Preferably, the production unit includes control means which are arranged to control:
Preferably, a panoply of crystals 1 are made from a same plate 3. More particularly, crystals 1 with different contours 2 are made from the same plate 3, to minimise scrap in skeleton 13, as seen in
In a particular embodiment, during first step 100 and/or third step 300, and/or fourth step 400, the work area is lubricated with air and/or a liquid fluid to evacuate machining waste. However, this lubrication function depends on the type of grinding wheel or tool used, and the particular operating instructions should be observed, especially for diamond grinding wheels or certain specific tools, in accordance with their sensitivity to thermal shock, or the need to operate in dry conditions, or otherwise.
In a particular embodiment, which also depends on the type of grinding wheels and/or tools implemented, during first step 100, and/or third step 300, and/or fourth step 400, plate 3 is immersed in a liquid fluid to which a current is imparted to remove machining waste.
The method according to the invention allows, in particular, to realize very thin crystals, because the chamfers are formed prior to cutting, for example a crystal of 0.5 mm thickness with 0.1 mm chamfers, which would be impossible to achieve using a conventional clamp holding arrangement.
More particularly, the parameters are as follows:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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17196547.8 | Oct 2017 | EP | regional |