The present invention relates to the field of horology and more specifically to a structure for a dial made of a fragile material. It also relates to the arrangement of this dial in a watch.
Watch dials can be made of materials such as mother-of-pearl, aventurine, etc., which have an attractive aesthetic appearance but have the drawback of being fragile. Consequently, they are liable to break or crack when the watch to which they are fitted is subjected to a shock, for example if the watch is dropped onto a hard floor. Hence, these watches cannot satisfy the requirements for shock resistance governed by Swiss watch industry standard NIHS 91-10.
In a conventional structure represented in
To overcome the aforecited drawback, it is an object of the present invention to propose a new dial structure allowing stress on the fragile plate to be reduced in the event of a shock, be it radial or vertical.
To this end, the present invention proposes a dial formed of two plates of different dimensions joined together, with a support plate having a larger dimension than that of the fragile plate so as to leave free on the support plate a peripheral rim intended to be mounted in a vertical direction relative to the bezel in place of the peripheral rim of the fragile plate. This dial is defined in claim 1 of the Patent.
The present invention also concerns a watch, typically a wristwatch as defined in claim 8 of the Patent.
Thus, in case of vertical shock, it is the support plate that butts against the bezel whereas the fragile plate can move along the same path without encountering any obstacle. It follows that the risk of cracking or breaking the fragile plate is greatly reduced.
In this new dial structure, the respective edges of the plates are not vertically aligned. This makes it possible to mount the dial in the watch case with distinct radial play for each plate. It is thus possible to mount the edge of the fragile plate with a greater radial clearance than that for the edge of the support plate so that, in the event of a radial shock, it is only the edge of the support plate that butts against the case. Again, it follows that the fragile plate will not be subjected to any significant stress in the event of a radial shock.
Other advantages will appear from the features set out in the claims, and from the detailed description of the invention illustrated hereinafter with reference to the annexed drawings, provided as non-limiting examples.
The present invention relates to a dial structure and to the arrangement thereof in a watch case comprising a timepiece movement M surmounted by a dial 2 above which move the hour hand H, minute hand m and seconds hand S driven by movement M. Referring to
In a conventional manner, watch case 1 includes a crystal 5, a back cover 8 and a joining element between crystal 5 and back cover 8 realized in one or more parts and including a bezel 6, a flange 6a and a case middle 7. Fragile plate 4 is arranged on the crystal 5 side and support plate 3 is arranged on the back cover 8 side of watch case 1. The support plate and the fragile plate define a horizontal plane, with the plates being disposed one on top of the other in a direction perpendicular to this plane, i.e. in a vertical direction. In a conventional manner, support plate 3 and fragile plate 4 are pierced with openings 9 for the passage of the hand arbor 10. Further, support plate 3 could be hollow in the centre.
According to the invention, fragile plate 4 has a surface area that is smaller than that of support plate 3 and which, in vertical projection onto support plate 3, does not go beyond the outer edge of the latter, so as to leave free on support plate 3 a peripheral rim 3b intended to be mounted facing a wall of the joining element and, more specifically, flange 6a which is integral with bezel 6 in the illustrated example.
This rim 3b is dimensioned to be largely concealed by the flange from the exterior of the crystal. It is substantially horizontal and intended to be mounted facing a complementary surface of flange 6a with play Dz allowing vertical shocks to be absorbed. This play Dz is substantially constant and comprised between 0.01 and 0.1 mm and preferably between 0.03 and 0.07 mm.
Peripheral rim 3b extends as far as edge 3c of support plate; edge 3c is substantially vertical and intended to be mounted facing another wall of the joining element with play Dx1, to absorb radial shocks. More precisely, edge 3c is mounted facing a wall 7b of complementary shape (in this case straight and perpendicular to the plane of dial 2) of internal collar 7a of case middle 7.
The two plates are arranged substantially concentrically relative to the central arbor 10 of the case which is the hand arbor. Thus, in the case of a circular dial, the fragile plate has a smaller diameter than the diameter of the support plate and the peripheral rim forms a ring of constant width around the fragile plate.
According to the preferred variant represented in
According to another variant that is not represented, the support plate is devoid of a housing and fragile plate 4 is superposed on support plate 3 while leaving a peripheral rim 3b of support plate 3 free for assembly facing flange 6a.
According to yet another variant (not represented), support plate 3 is hollow in the centre and forms a frame comprising an inner rim defined by an inner peripheral bottom portion of housing 3a.
Referring to the preferred variant of
Likewise, when the support plate is superposed on the fragile plate, the edge of the fragile plate is mounted with play Dx2 greater than Dx1.
Finally, if the fragile plate is entirely contained within the support plate housing, only the latter is stressed during a radial shock.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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17203954.7 | Nov 2017 | EP | regional |