This application claims the benefit of the filing date of French Patent Application No. 02094/06, filed Dec. 23, 2006, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The object of the invention is a display device for a timepiece, driven by a base wheel of a horological movement, controlling the display of a time indication member. Base wheel of the horological movement means any wheel intended to control, by means of the device, a hand, a disc or any time indication mechanism, in particular any wheel intended to control the display of the seconds, the minutes, the hours, the date, the day, the week, the month, the phases of the moon, the year or years, or any indication relating to the functioning of the timepiece, such as for example the remaining running time.
The on-demand display device is characterised in that the base wheel drives a cam, a lever held in the standby position by a spring being actuated manually on demand by means of a push button placed outside the timepiece, so as to make a rack turn on its axis until the moment when a finger of the rack comes to abut on the cam, the rack in its rotation driving a pinion carrying the member indicating the time or the functioning of the timepiece, the cam having a configuration corresponding to the series of values to be displayed.
According to a preferred embodiment, the base wheel is the cannon pinion controlling the display of the minutes and the device is driven by a second base wheel of the timepiece, which is the hour wheel, which drives a second cam, a lever, also maintained in the standby position by a second spring, being actuated manually on demand by means of the same push button systematically controlling the two levers so as to make a second rack turn on its axis, until the time when a finger of the second rack abuts on the cam, the second rack, during its rotation, driving a pinion carrying a time indication member, the cams having a configuration corresponding to the series of minutes or respectively hours to be displayed.
The base wheel can transmit the rotation movement to the cam by means of a setting wheel and a wheel secured to the cam, the base wheels travelling one turn in one hour or respectively in twelve hours.
The time indication members can be hands, discs or any device arranged to indicate the seconds, the minutes, the hours, the date, the day, the week, the month, the phases of the moon, the year, etc, or data relating to the functioning of the timepiece.
The pinions driven by the racks are concentric and the racks placed on each side of the concentric axes of said pinions each carrying a hand.
The two hands of the timepiece can be placed at midday when the levers controlling the racks are in the standby position.
The drawing depicts, by way of example, an embodiment of the on-demand display device for a timepiece.
The timepiece shown in
As shown in
On the left-hand parts of
Looking now at the left-hand part of the device of the timepiece displaying minutes on demand, a base wheel 1, referred to as a cannon pinion can be seen, it being understood that it travels one turn in one hour and is intended to control the display of the minutes. The base wheel or cannon pinion 1 transmits the movement of the timepiece to a setting wheel 2 that drives a wheel 3 secured to a cam 3, the wheel 3 and the cam 3 meshing so as to perform one turn in one hour.
A lever 5 is held in the standby position by a spring 6 in contact with a push button 7 actuated manually on demand from outside the timepiece, the push button 7 coming to act indirectly on the lever 5 which, when it is pressed, turns the rack 4 on its axis until the moment when a finger 4 secured to the rack comes to abut against the cam 3. During this rotation movement of the rack 4, the pinion 1 which carries the minute hand is driven until the moment when it indicates a position corresponding to the running of the timepiece. As soon as the pressure effected on the push button 7 is interrupted, the lever 5 rises again and the hand indicating the minutes returns to twelve o'clock.
Looking now at the right-hand part of the drawing, it can be seen that the lever 5 is in contact with a lever 10 that will control the indication of the hour hand as indicated below. The contact established between levers 5 and 10 is made by a pin placed at the end of the lever 10, a pin that will be in contact with the push button 7. It will thus be remarked that, when the push button 7 is actuated, it will act on the lever 5 by means of the pin of the lever 10 and thus the two levers 5 and 10 will be actuated at the same time.
As for the left hand part of the device for indicating the time on demand, the hour wheel 1 transmits its movement to a wheel 9 by means of a setting wheel 8. The wheel 9 is secured to a cam 9 and the hour wheel 1, just as the wheel 9 secured to the cam 9 thus makes one turn in twelve hours.
A lever 10 held in the standby position by a spring 11 is actuated by the push button 7 at the same time as the lever 5. The display demand coming from outside the watch to the push button 7 acts on the lever 10, which makes the rack 12 turn on its axis, a finger 12 secured to the rack 12 coming at its end of travel to abut on the cam 9. During its action performed by the push button 7, the lever 10 rotates the rack 12, which meshes with the pinion 1 that carries the hour hand.
When the two fingers 4 and 12 of the racks intended to indicate the minutes and hours are in contact with their respective cam 3 and 9, the timepiece can thus indicate the time. As soon as the push button 7 is released, the hands return to twelve o'clock by virtue of the action of the springs 6 and 11, which return the levers 5 and 10 to their standby position.
As mentioned in the introduction, the device that has just been described is not limited to the indication of the minutes and hours in a timepiece. On the contrary, one or other of the left and right parts of this device can be used to indicate any display relating to time data. It can thus be used to indicate the seconds, the date, the day, the week, the month, the phases of the moon or the year or years. It can also be used to indicate, on demand, other displays such as the remaining running time of a timepiece or any indication relating to the functioning of the timepiece.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
02094/06 | Dec 2006 | CH | national |