This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 05014135.7 filed Jun. 30, 2005, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention concerns a timepiece provided with a calendar mechanism activated each day by the timepiece movement and capable of displaying the date in accordance with the traditional Chinese calendar.
The Chinese calendar is still used nowadays to set the date of various festivities and for Chinese astrology. It is of the luni-solar type, in that it is based on lunar months which each begin on the day of the new moon, whereas the length of the Chinese years varies so as to be as close as possible to the tropical year.
The Chinese year starts on the second new moon that follows the winter solstice, with rare exceptions. Given that the length of the lunations is not constant and that its mean value (29.53088 days) is not equal to an integer number of days, the Chinese calendar includes long months of 30 days and short months of 29 days. No cycle of long and short months has been able to be defined.
Moreover, in order for the mean length of the Chinese years to coincide with that of a tropical year, normal years of twelve months and bissextile years of thirteen months, in which the extra month, called the bissextile month, is inserted in a position—- i.e. a row-which varies from one bissextile year to another as a function of astronomic data. This month takes the number of the preceding month, such that the last month of a year always takes the number 12. One inconvenient fact for a mechanical Chinese calendar display is that a position cycle of the bissextile month in the year has not been able to be defined.
Normal years can comprise 353, 354 or 355 days, whereas bissextile years can comprise 383, 384 or 385 days. Normal and bissextile years follow each other practically in a cycle of nineteen years, which corresponds to the Méton cycle of the Greek calendar and includes almost integer numbers of days, lunations and Chinese years, with twelve normal years and seven bissextile years. However, this cycle is not precise long term.
For further data as to the Chinese calendar, the reader can refer to the work of Nachum DERSHOWITZ and Edward M. REINGOLD, Calendrical Calculations, Cambridge University Press, 1997, and to the publications of Helmer ASLAKSEN: The Mathematics of the Chinese Calendar, 13 May 2004, and LeapMonths.nb, Mathematics package, 1999, available on the website.
Because of the peculiarities of the Chinese calendar summarized above, it is not currently possible to make a display mechanism for the dates of this calendar that can be driven by a timepiece movement and that can operate precisely long term without manual intervention, as can the known perpetual Julien or Gregorian date mechanisms, for example in accordance with CH Patent No. 660 440, or as provided by EP Patent No. 606 576 for a Muslim calendar display.
It is an object of the present invention to create a calendar mechanism driven daily by the movement of a timepiece and capable of displaying the dates of the traditional Chinese calendar at least in the form of the lunar date and the lunar month, taking account of bissextile months, and which can be made in practice and preferably in a quite reduced form to be incorporated in a watch. One basic idea of the invention consists in making a non-perpetual date mechanism, into which the person wearing the watch can manually enter the data necessary to obtain a correct display of the date, in an unconstrained manner.
There is therefore provided a timepiece including a timepiece movement and a Chinese calendar display device, characterized in that the Chinese calendar display device includes:
a calendar mechanism including a control lever actuated each day by a drive wheel of the timepiece movement;
a lunar month indicator associated with a month star-wheel having twelve teeth;
a lunar date indicator associated with a date wheel set including a date wheel with thirty teeth which is moved forward one step each day by a beak of the control lever, the date wheel set further including a drive finger arranged for moving the month star-wheel forward one step at the end of each revolution of the date wheel set;
a lunar month length selector, having at least two positions and cam surfaces acting as a support for the control lever, to define alternately two different stop positions for said lever respectively corresponding to a month of thirty days and to a month of twenty-nine days, the control lever being provided with a click cooperating with the date wheel set in order to move it one extra step via the movement of said lever at the end of a month of twenty nine days;
a first manual control lever arranged for changing the position of the lunar month length selector;
a bissextile month selector, having a normal position and a bissextile position and provided with a finger arranged for making the month star-wheel move back one step when said selector passes from the normal position to the bissextile position;
and a second manual control member arranged for making the bissextile month selector pass from the normal position to the bissextile position.
The lunar month length selector, which only has two different positions as regards their effect, can advantageously be coupled to a month length indicator, visible on the dial. Likewise, the bissextile month selector has only two positions as regards their effect and can advantageously be coupled to an indicator as to the type of month, visible on the dial.
Thus if the month length indicator indicates the correct length of the current month, the user of the timepiece need do nothing in order for the date and lunar month display to change correctly at the end of the last day of the month. If the user sees that the current month length indication is not correct, he can correct it by action on the first manual control member to set the month length indicator to the other position at any time, provided that it is before the action of the drive finger of the date wheel set at the end of that month.
When a bissextile month starts, the number of the month displayed by the lunar month indicator increases by one unit as in a normal month and it thus will have to be decreased by one unit to take the number of the preceding month. The user does this himself by actuating the second manual control member, which changes the position of the bissextile month sector and thus causes the month star-wheel and the indicator associated therewith to move back. It will be seen hereinafter that the selector can automatically return to its normal position at the end of the bissextile month, such that the user only needs to actuate the second control member once for each bissextile month, thus only seven times during a cycle of nineteen Chinese years.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear from the following description, which presents two advantageous embodiments by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the annexed drawings.
The watch shown without its exterior in
The watch further includes a Chinese calendar display including four indicators associated with dial 6, namely: a lunar date indicator 12 formed by a disc, one portion of which is visible in an aperture 13 of the dial; a lunar month indicator 14 formed by a disc, one portion of which is visible in another aperture 15 of the dial; a month length indicator 16 formed by a hand having two positions opposite two marks C and L on the dial; and finally a month type indicator 18 formed by a hand having two positions opposite two marks N and B on the dial. Marks C and L respectively represent a short lunar month of twenty-nine days and a long lunar month of thirty days. Marks B and N respectively represent a bissextile lunar month and a non-bissextile lunar month, which will be called a normal month. A normal month can be short or long, like a bissextile month. Indicators 12, 14, 16 and 18 are controlled by a Chinese calendar mechanism illustrated by
Calendar mechanism 20 partially shown in
A second arm 38 of lever 23 is provided with a beak 40 and a click 41, which pivots at 42 on the lever and is pushed in the clockwise direction by a spring 43 abutting against a pin 44 of the click.
The date indicator disc 12 (which is only shown very partially in
Like disc 12, month indicator disc 14 is only shown very partially in
When the current lunar month is a long month, i.e. including thirty days, selector 27 has to be in the position shown in
Until the evening of the twenty-eighth day, the daily incrementing of the date in aperture 13 by the rotation of date wheel set 50 through one step occurs as in the preceding example, except that the initial idle motion of lever 23 and its beak 40 is larger. Click 41 slides over cam 53 without producing any effect.
On the twenty-ninth day, click 41 of the lever is in recess 54 of cam 53, as shown in
By way of variant replacing the indication by hand 16,
However, it is assumed here that this month is a bissextile month, a fact that the person wearing the watch has learned from a printed calendar, the press, or any other means. The user will then correct the calendar indication in the following manner. In
The arrows of
In light of the preceding description, it will be understood that the watch according to the invention correctly indicates the date and the number of the month in the Chinese calendar provided that the following actions are carried out:
1. During each month, the user must check whether the long or short month indication by the hand of indicator 16 is correct. If it is incorrect he must change it by pressing on push-button 10.
2. At the start of a bissextile month, the user must enter this information in the calendar mechanism by pressing on push-button 11, such that the bissextile month indicator 18 will pass from the N position to the B position, then return automatically to the N position at the end of the month.
Owing to these simple manual operations, it has become possible to make a Chinese calendar display mechanism which is not very complicated, such that it can be incorporated in a wristwatch, and which gives accurate indications throughout the year despite the non-cyclical nature of the Chinese character.
The switching of selector 82 from one position to the other by means of push-button 10 mentioned in the preceding example occurs by means of a shuttle transmission of known type, including a shuttle 90 and a slide-block 91. A pin 92 of shuttle 90 is guided linearly into a groove 93 of the plate of the movement and it is pushed back by a spring 94 so that one end 95 of the shuttle is pressed into a hollow of the corresponding end of slide-block 91. This latter is also guided linearly on two fixed pins 96. The front end of shuttle 90 has a rectangular shape and abuts alternately on one or other of the two projecting corners 97 and 98 arranged on either side of a hollow 99 of selector 82. When idle, spring 94 pushes shuttle 90 back away from the selector 82. At each application of pressure on push-button 11, shuttle 90 pushes that of corners 97 and 98 that are in front of it, which causes selector 82 and hand 16 to pivot towards the other position and to bring the other corner in front of the shuttle. The next application of pressure on push-button 11 thus produces the reverse effect, i.e. selector 82 has a back and forth movement.
Thus, the mechanism of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05014135 | Jun 2005 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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96792 | Gale | Nov 1869 | A |
5184333 | Caspar | Feb 1993 | A |
5239522 | Corlet | Aug 1993 | A |
5379272 | Parmigiani | Jan 1995 | A |
5764597 | Shih | Jun 1998 | A |
6826122 | Zaugg | Nov 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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660 440 G | Apr 1987 | CH |
0 606 576 | Jul 1994 | EP |
1 286 233 | Feb 2003 | EP |
1 637 942 | Mar 2006 | EP |
2 266 977 | Nov 1993 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070002690 A1 | Jan 2007 | US |