This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 07111341.9 filed Jun. 28, 2007, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to the field of horology. More specifically it concerns a timepiece such as a watch provided with a moon phase indicator. Such timepieces are known to the persons skilled in the art.
They generally include a moon phase mechanism, formed of a gear train driven by an hour wheel and of a disc to which two representations of the moon are affixed. The disc is visible behind an aperture in the general shape of a semi circle, the diameter side of which includes two convex portions arranged such that the moon appears to be ascending, full, then descending progressively during its path through the aperture. This conventional representation of the phases of the moon does not permit any fun or surprising effects, although such effects are greatly sought after in horology. Moreover, this representation is not true to reality, since the incline of the moon relative to the 12 o'clock-6 o'clock axis of the watch, varies depending upon the position of the moon in the aperture. When a face is drawn on the moon, as is commonly the case, at first the face is perpendicular to the 12 o'clock-6 o'clock axis, then parallel, then perpendicular again. The effect obtained is neither realistic nor attractive.
The present invention overcomes these drawbacks by proposing a timepiece fitted with a moon phase indication wherein the representations of the moon are mobile in rotation on the moon phase disc.
More specifically, the invention concerns a timepiece comprising a dial with an aperture behind which there is mounted a moon phase disc driven in rotation by a moon phase gear train. According to the invention, the disc is mounted to be mobile in rotation about a fixed sun pinion, and two planetary wheels, each of which is rigidly locked with a representation of the moon, are rotatably mounted on said disc, engaging at least indirectly with the solar pinion, so as to form a planetary gearing with the sun pinion.
Owing to the features of the invention, the representations of the moon are mobile in rotation with respect to the moon phase disc. This feature provides numerous attractive and surprising effects.
In a particular embodiment, two intermediate wheels are mounted on the moon phase disc, inserted between the planetary wheels and the sun pinion.
This advantageous feature enables the representations of the moon to rotate in a direction opposite to that of the moon phase disc.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment, the planetary wheels are fitted with a toothing and the sun pinion is fitted with a toothing, the ratio of the number of teeth between the toothings of the planetary wheels and the toothing of the sun pinion being equal to 1.
This feature enables the representations of the moon to rotate at the same angular velocity as the moon phase disc and in the opposite direction. As a result, the representations of the moon appear with a fixed incline relative to the 12 o'clock-6 o'clock axis of the timepiece, when they pass through the aperture.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly from the following detailed description of an example embodiment of a timepiece fitted with a moon phase indication according to the invention, this example being given purely by way of non-limiting illustration, with reference to the annexed drawings.
The timepiece illustrated in
The timepiece is further provided with a moon phase indication formed by a moon aperture 16, made in dial 12, and a moon phase disc 18, mounted so as to move in rotation behind aperture 16. The moon phase disc 18 is conventionally fitted with two representations of the moon 19a and 19b arranged on the same diameter, on either side of the centre, so as to appear in turn through aperture 16.
The moon phase disc 18 is the visible part of a moon phase mechanism 20 illustrated in
In a variant of this embodiment, inserted between drive wheel 26 and moon phase disc 18, moon phase train 24 includes a star wheel 7 bearing a pinion with 16 teeth, driven by finger 28, and an intermediate wheel with 16 teeth cooperating with moon phase disc 18 and driven by the pinion with 16 teeth. Disc 18 is thus fitted with 135 teeth and completes one revolution in 59.0625 days, which equates to two lunations of 29.53125 days, very close to the true value. This embodiment is known to those skilled in the art and will not be described in more detail here.
According to the invention, moon phase disc 18 is mounted so as to move in rotation about a sun pinion 36 fixedly mounted on plate 22. For this purpose, sun pinion 36 is driven into an arbour 38 rigidly mounted on plate 22 via a lunation bridge 40. Lunation bridge 40 is formed of a straight bar, as illustrated in
Moon phase disc 18 is shown in more detail in
Planetary wheels 44a and 44b mesh with two intermediate wheels 50a and 50b mounted so as to move in rotation on disc 18 via planetary bridges 46a and 46b, or, in a variant, without any bridges. Intermediate wheels 50a and 50b themselves mesh with sun pinion 36, such that the assembly of wheels 44—intermediate wheels 50—sun pinion 36 form a planetary train. Advantageously, the toothings of sun pinion 36 and planetary wheels 44a, 44b include an identical number of teeth, whereas intermediate wheels 50a, 50b can be provided with any number of teeth. In a variant of this embodiment, planetary wheels 44a and 44b mesh directly with sun pinion 36.
The operation of the timepiece thus described is illustrated in
It will be noted that in the other embodiments described, planetary wheels 44a and 44b have the possibility of rotating more or less quickly than disc 18, depending upon the ratio of the number of teeth of the toothings of sun pinion 36 and planetary wheels 44a, 44b. They may also rotate in the same direction as disc 18, or in the opposite direction, depending upon whether or not intermediate wheels 50a, 50b are inserted between planetary wheels 44a, 44b and sun pinion 36. These different variants allow all sorts of interesting fun effects.
Referring now to
Moreover, discs 48a and 48b are formed of two polarizer-glass plates whose polarization relative to the 12 o'clock-6 o'clock axis of the timepiece is identical and defined. For example, as illustrated in
Aperture 16 is circular. It is sealed by a polarizer-glass plates 52 formed of a bottom half 52a and a top half 52b, which are complementary and placed side by side The diameter of bottom half 52a has two convex portions, such that top half 52b takes the conventional form of a moon aperture. Bottom half 52a is polarized parallel to the 12 o'clock-6 o'clock axis, whereas top half 52b is polarized perpendicular to that axis.
When disc 18 is being driven in rotation, discs 48a and 48b pass behind the two aperture halves 52a and 52b. Since discs 48a and 48b have a fixed incline relative to the 12 o'clock-6 o'clock axis, the polarization of these discs remains parallel to that axis for the entire duration of their travel through aperture 16. The superposition of two glass plates of parallel polarization appears transparent, whereas the superposition of two glass plates of perpendicular polarization appears opaque. As a result, when the discs 48a and 48b pass behind top half 52b of aperture 16, they are visible and appear to be opaque, whereas when they pass behind bottom half 52a, they appear to be transparent, thus barely visible. Their travel therefore includes an active part, when they are visible, and a passive part, when they are transparent.
The visual effect obtained for the moon phase display is particularly attractive. It is illustrated in
It will be noted that in this embodiment, disc 18 can be mounted on plate 22 via a lunation bridge 40. In such case, a lunation bridge 40 comprising two convex portions 42a and 42b will preferably be used, as illustrated in
A timepiece fitted with an improved moon phase indication has thus been described. It goes without saying that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments that have just been described and that various simple alterations and variants could be envisaged by those skilled in the art, without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined by the annexed claims.
It will be noted, in particular, that in the embodiments described, planetary wheels 44a, 44b, and intermediate wheels 50a, 50b, are mounted on the side of dial 12 of moon phase disc 18. In such case, sun pinion 36 is also mounted in plate 22, on the dial side of disc 18. This assembly enables a large part of the planetary wheel formed by wheels 44, intermediate wheels 50 and pinion 36, to be seen through aperture 16, which may have an interesting and fun effect. In a variant, those skilled in the art could choose to mount the planetary train on the plate 22 side of disc 18, so that only discs 48a, 48b, to which images of the moon are affixed, appear on the dial 12 side. This embodiment is much more conventional in appearance and is particularly well suited to the embodiment with polarizer-glass plates.
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07111341 | Jun 2007 | EP | regional |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090003137 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |