This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 04001596.8 filed Jan. 26, 2004, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention concerns a method of manufacturing hour symbols added to the dial of a timepiece by means of securing feet for replacing all or part of the numbers indicating the hours, said symbols being of very small dimensions and generally having simple geometrical shapes.
The invention also concerns a robotized installation for individually machining said symbols thereby offering great freedom of choice as to shape and a higher finishing quality of the surface state of the visible parts after they are fixed to the dial.
The symbols or numbers disposed on the hour-circle, or on secondary dials, are usually made by transferring, or by screen printing, giving the impression that they are printed. These symbols can also be obtained by dying the lower surface of the dial, the parts in relief forming the symbols then being polished, varnished or covered with a luminescent pigment, as described for example in FR Patent No. 2 308 133. These symbols can also be parts added to the dial being produced by stamping a metal plate, then by bonding, for example using a hot setting adhesive, as indicated in CH Patent No. 506 111.
When one wishes to obtain high quality pieces, in particular when the metal used is a precious metal, the symbols, which are then usually provided with feet for securing them to the dial by driving them into housings provided for such purpose, are roughed out by machining or stamping a profile, then taken to be faceted. The sections employed are generally rectangular, either along a “longitudinal” mode, or along a “transverse” mode.
According to the first embodiment, the profile has a section in which a cross section of a symbol, including the feet, can be inscribed. Over a certain profile length corresponding to several symbols placed end-to-end, a face is first machined to form the definitive appearance of the visible part of the symbols, then the feet are formed by milling the opposite face. The symbols are then cut off and fall into a tank for the subsequent cleaning and drying operations before being packed in bulk for dispatch. One embodiment of this type is described in more detail for example in U.S. Pat. No. 3,323,396. This method has the drawback of not allowing the cut off part to be finished, for example by diamondpolishing. There also exists a risk of the feet, which are very fine little rods with a diameter of less than a millimetre, being damaged when dropped into the container, which can lead to a discard rate of 30% or even more.
According to a second embodiment, the profile has a section in which the contour selected for the base of a symbol can be inscribed. In a first operation, the upper faces and sides of the symbols are diamondpolished. In a second operation, the symbol is gripped on two opposite support surfaces between the jaws of a hard metal clamp to be cut along a length substantially corresponding to the thickness of the symbol, increased by the height of the feet. In a third operation, the feet are milled, then the symbols are released and they drop into a tank for the subsequent bulk cleaning and drying operations, before being packed. According to a variant of this embodiment, disclosed in CH Patent No. 565 406, the end of the profile is gripped by a clamp over a length corresponding to the length of the feet, then a section is cut off and brought by a revolving table before a faceting station, then before a turret where it is picked up by another clamp on opposite sides that have already been faceted, in order to the two feet to be milled in succession. As can be seen, in this embodiment, in which finished surfaces are gripped between clamps in order to execute the final machining of the feet, there is a high risk of producing symbols with visible defects in appearance causing them to be downgraded or even rejected when said symbols are intended for top of the range timepieces.
It is thus an object of the present invention to overcome the drawbacks of the aforecited prior art by providing a method and an installation for implementing the same for manufacturing hour symbols ideally having no defects in appearance and allowing great flexibility as regards their shape.
Thus, from a metal profile having a suitable section, the method according to the invention enables hour symbols to be manufactured by individual machining with at least one securing foot in the dial of a timepiece. The method includes the following basic steps:
The method further includes secondary steps, consisting of:
As can be seen, there is not, at any stage of the method, any taking up again by the clamps, nor any bulk processing, so that there are no defective parts, which is particularly advantageous from the economical point of view, especially when the metal of the profile is a precious metal such as gold, or a gold alloy.
According to a preferred embodiment, the feet are milled at the end of the profile.
This method is implemented using a robotized installation with numerical control (CNC) that can be programmed to generate symbols of very varied shapes. The installation includes a profile feed magazine, mobile horizontally on a slide along an axis Z2 facing clamps for gripping the symbols by the feet. Machining is carried out by means of a robot with four degrees of freedom (X, Y, Z1, ) arranged between the magazine and the clamps, The installation also includes a manipulator arm for gripping parts by suction.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear upon reading the following detailed description, with reference to the annexed drawing, in which:
With reference to
It would also be possible to manufacture the same symbols from a profile having an isosceles trapezoid section slightly greater than the base of the symbols, taking account of the diamondpolishing operations. As will be seen hereinafter, the method also enables symbols with no vertical flank to be manufactured, faces 4, 6 and 8 as well as ends 9a, 9b, having a rounded shape.
With reference now to FIGS. 4 to 7, an embodiment of the method according to the invention will now be described. The rough material for manufacturing the symbols is formed by a profile 12 of rectangular section 10. It may be, for example, a gold bar 2 metres in length.
In a first step “a” shown in
Despite such small dimensions, and surprisingly, the feet have sufficient mechanical resistance to be able to be gripped by a clamp 13, which, in the example shown in
In a third step “c”, shown in
It will also be noted that, since all of the handling is carried out by gripping the feet it is no longer necessary to have two parallel flanks and that the visible part of the symbol can comprise only curves and have, for example, the shape of a drop of water.
The following steps d, e, f concern the final operations prior to dispatch. In step “d”, symbol 1 is removed from tailstock 13 by a manipulator arm including a suction grasping device and deposited in a tray able to contain, for example, a batch of 100 symbols. In a step “e”, the symbols arranged on the trays are washed and dried. In a last step “f” the same trays are wrapped up, for example with a retractable plastic film to hold the symbols in place for the purpose of dispatch.
The method that has just been described corresponds to that designated in the preamble as a “transverse embodiment”. Without departing from the scope of the invention, one can also envisage a longitudinal embodiment, the first step “a” then consisting in machining the feet, not in the section of the profile, but in one of its faces, then in the second step “b” in gripping the preform by its feet, the following steps remaining unchanged. In this variant, the profile can advantageously be T-shaped, the width of the vertical bar being the diameter of the feet.
) is disposed between magazine 21 and clamp 23. The installation also includes a manipulator arm (not shown) for gripping pieces by suction, the assembly being driven by a programmable CNC for generating symbols individually with very varied shapes. In a first step, magazine 21, by moving on slide 20 along axis Z2, positions itself opposite robot 25 in order to machine a first foot, then by rotating through an angle α=180° in order to machine the second foot. Robot 25 withdraws and magazine 21 moves forward as far as clamp 23, which grips the feet. Robot 25 then moves along axis Z1 to cut the preform in a second step and magazine 21 moves back to its initial position. In a third step, the robot moves along axis Z1 towards clamp 23 to carry out the diamondpolishing operations owing to its four degrees of freedom and the orientation of the preform made possible by a rotation β of the clamp. The subsequent unloading, washing, drying and packing operations will not be described since they are usual operations in this field.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04001596.8 | Jan 2004 | EP | regional |