The present invention relates to a sealed wrist watch case comprising a protective casing surrounded by a middle and a bezel.
A sealed watch case intended for depths greater than 300 meters and consisting of a middle-cum-bezel and a bottom made of a material less strong than steel, which has an interior dome made of a high mechanical strength material which fits the inner face of the bottom and at least partially fits the inner wall of the middle-cum-bezel and bears via its edge against the side of a shoulder of the middle-cum-bezel opposite the side on which the glass bears, has already been proposed by CH 690 870.
This solution has two weak points which limit the depth that can be tolerated by the sealed case: firstly, the presence of a shoulder on the middle made of a material of lower mechanical strength and arranged between the glass and the interior dome, which would be crushed under a pressure exceeding the elastic limit of the material of the middle-cum-bezel; the second weak point is due to the fact that the portion of the dome bearing against the shoulder of the middle-cum-bezel projects from the wall of the dome, creating poor conditions for transferring the compressive force exerted on the dome.
The document mentions that the case having a dome made of titanium 3 mm thick can reach a depth of a thousand meters. The presence of the shoulder on the middle held between the glass and the interior dome would, however, not make it possible to descend much deeper without risking permanent crushing of this shoulder.
A sealed watch case of which the body is at least partly made of plastic and part of which surrounds the rim of the glass is described in CH 343 949. A middle-cum-bezel surrounds the plastic case body and has a frustoconical interior shoulder acting on the part of the plastic case body surrounding the rim of the glass in such a way that when the bottom is screwed on it exerts axial traction on the middle-cum-bezel, by virtue of which traction the part of the case body is elastically deformed due to the axial pressure exerted thereon.
That document still includes a case body made at least partly of compressible material. It does not therefore include a casing having a pressure resistant structure since it is designed specifically to deform under a force of axial traction exerted on the case body, unlike a normal watch case.
The ability to deform required in CH 343 949 as a result of an axial force being exerted on the plastic case body is therefore intended for a purpose opposite to that of the present invention.
The object of the present invention is to overcome the limitations of the prior art solutions while limiting the increase in the thickness of a sealed wrist watch case which is able to tolerate a predetermined pressure.
The problem which occurs when making a sealed wrist watch case which is resistant down to very great depths, typically of between 3000 and 5000 meters, is in particular its thickness. Sealed wrist watch cases are known which are resistant to pressures of around 10 to 15 MPa, corresponding respectively to depths of 1000 and 1500 meters. These cases are already around 14.5 mm thick which is already relatively thick for a wrist watch. In order to be resistant to pressures 3 to 4 times greater, the thickness of such a case would have to be increased by more than 5 mm, which presents problems for a wrist watch. Above a certain thickness, every extra millimeter is a millimeter too much.
For this reason, the subject of the present invention is a sealed wrist watch case comprising a protective casing surrounded by a middle and a bezel, according to claim 1.
The main advantage of this sealed watch case is that it can tolerate pressures of several tens of MPa with substantially less of an increase in thickness compared to conventional watch cases, this allowing a watch case to be produced which can tolerate depths of several thousand meters, typically between 3000 and 5000 meters, and the thickness of which allows it to be worn as a wrist watch. Since the bezel and the middle do not protect the movement of the watch which is entirely protected by the protective casing, they can be made of the same material as is traditionally used for watch cases, ranging from plastic to platinum via stainless steel and the various alloys of gold.
Another advantage of the invention is that the sealing and the pressure resistance are obtained from completely different components which have no influence whatsoever on each other. By contrast, the sealing members are involved in the assembly of at least some components of the protective casing.
The attached drawings illustrate schematically and by way of example an embodiment and two variants of a sealed wrist watch case according to the present invention.
In the figures:
When consideration was given to making a watch case resistant to pressures of around 50 MPa, it was found that the conventional sealed watch case, such as that illustrated in
The wrist watch case of the present invention and illustrated in
This bottom 1 has an arcuate profile which improves its flexural strength. At its edge there is a planar surface 1a on which a side wall 2 rests which is made of a material the compressive strength of which is substantially greater than that of stainless steel or gold. Given that this side wall 2 must be perforated to allow the passage of the winding stem, a metal-ceramic alloy is preferred. An alloy such as a nickel-free steel of the Biodur 108 type can be used, the properties of which are shown in table II.
This side wall 2 is defined by two planar surfaces, one in contact with the surface 1a of the bottom 1 and the other in contact with a planar surface 3a of the periphery of the glass 3, which is made of sapphire having an appropriate Young's modulus and flexural strength as shown in table I.
The protective casing formed here by the bottom 1, the side wall 2 and the glass 3 includes a pressure resistant structure SR having parallel lateral faces perpendicular to the bearing surfaces between this side wall 2 and the bottom 1, on the one hand, and between this side wall 2 and the glass 3, on the other, and which extends without a gap as far as the bottom 1 of the casing and overlaps at least part of the side wall 2 and the bottom 1 of the casing. This pressure resistant structure SR is defined in
The side wall 2 has an outer side wall 2a situated in the extension of the lateral surface of the glass 3, the cross sections defined by these lateral surfaces being constant. These two lateral surfaces are surrounded by an annular seal 4. The base 4a of this seal 4 is compressed in the radial direction by an inner lateral surface part 5a of a middle 5 surrounding the side wall 2 of the protective casing. An inner shoulder provided between the inner lateral surface part 5a of the middle 5 and the rest of this lateral surface surrounding the side wall 2 abuts against an outer shoulder of this side wall 2.
The part of the middle 5 situated at the bottom 1 of the protective casing has a thread for receiving a threaded clamp ring 6 between the middle 5 and the bottom 1. A seal 7 is arranged between an outer shoulder of the bottom 1 and the base of the middle 5.
The part of the annular seal 4 which surrounds the lateral face of the glass 3 is compressed in the radial direction by a clamp ring 8, preferably made of titanium. Thus, the annular seal 4 serves both as a seal between the glass 3 and the side wall 2 and for fixing these two pieces together. A bezel 9 is also fixed around the clamp ring 8 by a connecting ring 10 straddling an annular depression 8a in the clamp ring 8 and an annular groove 9a in the inner lateral face of the bezel 9.
This sealed mounting of the glass 3 by way of a ring compressed in the radial direction has the advantage of completely separating the compressive strength from the sealing function. Moreover, while a slight elastic compression of the side wall 2 occurs at very great depths, the annular seal 4 allows the glass to slide and to remain permanently in contact with the adjacent end of the side wall 2 of the protective casing.
The variant of
The second variant of
Combining the two pieces 1 and 2 into a single piece 12 currently causes a problem for manufacturing when this piece 12 is made of ceramic, given the perforation required for the passage of the winding stem.
It would not be possible to make the whole piece 12 from the alloy Biodur 108 used for the side wall alone in
The following two tables summarize the conditions that the materials used for various components of the protective casing must satisfy in order to provide a watch case resistant to pressures of up to 50 MPa.
It can be seen from these tables and from simulations carried out on the basis of the values in these tables, that the lower limit that can be fixed for the Young's modulus is 100 000 MPa, while the flexural strength and compressive strength can each be fixed at 500 MPa.
The following table III is a comparative table relating to the dimensions of the wrist watch case, on the one hand according to the present invention and on the other according to the prior art case illustrated in
It can be seen that at the same pressure of 49 MPa, the reduction in the thickness is 2.02 mm, or 10.25%. This comparison is of interest given that it was carried out on two sealed wrist watch cases for two identical watch movements M, which means that the 2.02 mm reduction in the thickness of the case is solely a result of the case concept according to the present invention.
This shows that, no matter what depth the sealed wrist watch case is intended to be resistant to, the structure of the case according to the invention allows the thickness to be reduced. Of course, the greater the depth the greater the reduction, but table III shows that this reduction is already virtually 1 mm at a pressure of 15.5 MPa.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07405187 | Jul 2007 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4558956 | Bettschen | Dec 1985 | A |
4620798 | Scarinzi | Nov 1986 | A |
4674892 | Loth | Jun 1987 | A |
6116774 | Sasaki et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6406178 | Luscher et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
343 949 | Dec 1959 | CH |
336 866 D | Oct 1967 | CH |
690 870 | Feb 2001 | CH |
0 853 094 | Jul 1998 | EP |
1 240 239 | Jul 1971 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090010111 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |