This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 11159422.2 filed Mar. 23, 2011, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention generally concerns a movement for a complication timepiece including an instantaneous actuator, which is controlled by the movement and arranged to actuate a mechanism of the movement by abruptly pushing an element of said mechanism away from an initial position, the actuator including a trailing wheel driven in rotation about its axis by the movement, an eccentric which is free to rotate coaxially to the trailing wheel and arranged to be stopped against and therefore driven in rotation by the trailing wheel, a hammer returned by a spring against the periphery of the eccentric and arranged to cooperate with the curve of the eccentric so as to rotate the eccentric relative to the trailing wheel, and a pivoting wheel set including a projecting portion which is free to rotate coaxially to the trailing wheel, the pivoting wheel set being arranged to be driven in rotation by the eccentric, and the projecting portion of the pivoting wheel set being arranged to push away said element of the mechanism in passing, so as to suddenly, and with practically no transition, change the state of a mechanism or a display of the movement. The present invention concerns, in particular, a movement including an actuator of this type for actuating the clamp of a running equation of time mechanism.
EP Patent Application No. 11159387.7 filed on 23 Mar. 2011 is incorporated herein by reference. This Patent Application discloses a timepiece movement including a running equation of time device for driving a minute hand to true solar time in rotation coaxially to the minute and hour hands for civil time. This equation of time device includes, in particular, a correction mechanism comprising a locking clamp for keeping the solar time minute hand secured to the civil time minute hand. The locking clamp is fitted with a control lever for moving the jaws of the clamp apart when it is actuated, and for letting the clamp close when it is no longer actuated. The function of the clamp may be likened to that of an uncoupling mechanism acting on the solar time minute hand, since it is only possible to correct the position of said hand when the jaws of the clamp are moved apart.
According to the aforementioned document, an actuator controlled by the movement is also arranged to exert pressure on the control lever of the locking clamp of the running equation of time device at regular intervals. As soon as the actuator causes the solar time minute hand to be uncoupled, the correction means can return the hand towards the angular position which is correct at that moment. Then, after several instants, the actuator stops actuating the control lever and the jaws of the clamp close again. Thereafter, the angle between the solar time minute hand and the civil time minute hand is frozen until the next actuators.
It will therefore be clear from the foregoing that the angular distance between the civil time minute hand and the solar time minute hand is determined, on the one hand, by the difference between the civil time and solar time, and on the other hand, by the position of the civil time minute hand at the precise moment when the actuator stops actuating the control lever. With this system, the civil time minute hand must therefore occupy a very precise position at the moment of locking. There is thus a requirement for an actuator for which the transition between the open state and the closed state of the locking clamp occurs cleanly and with practically no transition.
Moreover, one problem which arises more generally with complication timepieces concerns the operations performed by the user and particularly the setting of the time, or date of the timepiece. Indeed, if the user sets the time or performs any other operation on the mechanism, while the complication is working, this operation is liable to cause damage. This is why the instructions for calendar watches in particular often state that no adjustments should be carried out between 10 pm and 1 am. There is therefore a requirement for an instantaneous actuator which can limit to a minimum the time during which a complication is operating. Particularly, with the aforementioned running equation of time device, there is a requirement to reduce to a minimum the time during which the clamp is open and the solar time minute hand is uncoupled.
There are known timepieces movements which include an instantaneous actuator and which answer the definition given in the preamble. FR Patent No. 2 232 788, in particular, discloses a timepiece movement including an instantaneous calendar mechanism. This calendar mechanism is controlled by an instantaneous actuator arranged to ensure that the date and day of the week indication jumps forward. The actuator disclosed in this document is for triggering the calendar jump from one day to the next in an almost instantaneous manner. However, although the actuator disclosed is capable of being almost instantaneously triggered, it is not, by any means, arranged to return quickly to its initial position. This actuator is not therefore suitable for controlling a transitional action, i.e. an action that is limited in time and during which the actuated mechanism suddenly returns to its initial position.
It is thus an object of the present invention to overcome the aforementioned drawbacks. The present invention achieves this object by providing a timepiece movement comprising an instantaneous actuator controlled by the movement which is in conformity with the annexed claim 1.
It will be clear that, owing to the features of the invention, the duration of the period during which the actuator pushes back the mechanism to be actuated is not determined by the rotational speed of the trailing wheel, but by a double trigger. The first trigger is the result of the spring returning the hammer against the periphery of the eccentric, whereas the second trigger is caused by said return force.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following description, given solely by way of non-limiting example, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
The timepiece movement of the present example includes a calendar mechanism and a running equation of time device. It should be specified, however, that the present invention is not limited solely to timepiece movements of this type. On the contrary, the present invention generally concerns timepiece movements with complications.
The following description will not describe the timepiece movement as a whole, but only the running equation of time mechanism and the actuator which are the subjects of the invention. As regards the calendar, it need only be specified that the date indication is implemented in a known manner via a 31 wheel set driven at a rate of one revolution per month, and that the 31 wheel set in turn drives, via a gear train with a ratio of 1/12, an equation of time cam 101 which completes one revolution in a year. In a known manner, the radius of the equation of time cam expresses on each point of the circumference thereof the value of the difference between the civil time and true solar time for a given day of the year.
Referring first of all to
Referring now to
The running equation of time device further includes a heart-piece 119 which is driven onto pipe 113 and an equation of time lever 115, the end of which is returned against the periphery of the heart-piece by a spring 123. Moreover, as can be seen in
The running equation of time device is associated with an instantaneous actuator which is specifically covered by the present invention. This instantaneous actuator which will be described in more detail hereinafter is driven by the movement.
The operation of the running equation of time device will now be described. As seen above, while no force is being exerted on control lever 124, pipe 113 and heart-piece 119 are integral with the false cannon-pinion 125 which drives said pipe and heart-piece in rotation. As will be described hereinafter, the instantaneous actuator is arranged to press on the end 126 of small lever 124 once every 3 hours. The instantaneous actuator thus forces the jaws of locking clamp 121 to half open and release their pressure on pipe 113. Released by the clamp, the pipe pivots, driven by the heart-piece, until roller 117 is immobilised in the notch of the heart-piece. It will be clear that the position occupied by the solar time minute hand at this precise moment depends on the angular position of frame 111 and thus on that of the equation of time cam 101. A few moments later, the instantaneous actuator stops pressing on control lever 124 and the jaws of clamp 121 close on pipe 113, thus freezing the angle between the two minute hands for the next 3 hours. In this regard, it will be clear that the angle between the two minute hands at the moment when clamp 121 closes on pipe 113 is determined, on the one hand, by the position of the equation of time cam and on the other hand, by the position occupied by the civil time minute hand at this moment. The position occupied by the civil time minute hand, at the moment when the locking means close again, is thus critical for the operation of a running equation of time device like that of this example.
The instantaneous actuator will now be described with reference to
In the present example, the trailing wheel 205 is driven by the motion work of the movement (not shown) at the substantially constant speed of one revolution every 3 hours. The trailing wheel will therefore be called the “3 hour wheel” hereinafter. It will be clear however that the invention is not limited to this particular rotational speed. Indeed, according to the invention, wheel 205 could be driven at absolutely any speed. It should be specified, however, that for the equation of time device of the present example to operate, wheel 205 must complete exactly one revolution in N hours, where the parameter “N” can be any integer number greater than or equal to 1. It will also be clear that the kinematic chain which drives the trailing wheel does not necessarily pass through the motion work.
In
The length of the pin 215 is such that the end thereof overshoots oblong 206 so that it can push finger 213. In
As the Figures also show, when tip-lever 209 is raised by finger 213, the back of the tip-lever presses against the end 126 of the small control lever 124 with sufficient force to half open the jaws of the locking clamp 121 and to release the pipe 113. To half open the jaws of the locking clamp, the tip-lever must force the double spring 120 and it will be clear that, in reaction, the control lever and tip-lever are then returned against the projecting portion (the finger) 213 by the double spring (120). This reaction force has no effect while finger 213 is being pushed by pin 215 and the point of maximum lift of the tip-lever has not been reached. However, as soon as the finger passes the point of maximum lift of the tip lever (
It is clear from the foregoing why the actuator of the present example is called “instantaneous”. Indeed, according to the invention, the duration of the period during which the actuator presses on lever 124 is not determined by the rotational speed of the trailing wheel, but by a double trigger effect which is caused first of all by the powerful return spring of the hammer 217 and then the double spring 120. Moreover, as explained hereinbefore, the instantaneous actuator also determines the moment at which the locking means releases pipe 113 and the moment at which it locks the pipe again. Since the revolutions of the trailing wheel 205 take exactly 3 hours, the position of the civil time minute hand at the moment when the locking means is actuated is always the same. The running equation of time device is preferably arranged so that the civil time minute hand occupies the “12 o'clock” position at the moment when the locking means again locks the pipe after having released said pipe for several moments.
It will also be clear that various alterations and/or improvements evident to those skilled in the art may be made to the embodiment described herein without departing from the scope of the present invention defined by the annexed claims. In particular, the presence of tip-lever 209 is not essential to the invention. Indeed, even if, in the present example, the projecting portion (the finger) 213 pushes away the element of the mechanism (control lever 124 of the running equation of time device) via tip-lever 209, the projecting portion could equally well enter directly into contact with the element of the mechanism in order to push said element away.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11159387.7 | Mar 2011 | EP | regional |
11159422.2 | Mar 2011 | EP | regional |