The present invention relates to the field of mechanical horology, and more particularly relates to a timepiece whereof the barrel is arranged in an advantageous manner.
The barrel is the driving organ used in mechanical watches. It acts as an energy accumulator wound by the user or by an oscillating weight and gradually restoring the energy it has stored to the train of the watch.
A conventional barrel comprises:
The drum and the cover generally serve to pivot the barrel arbor so as to stabilize the latter part. A ratchet is mounted secured to the barrel arbor, generally by a double squared connection. It is driven by a manual or automatic winding device to pivot the arbor and wind the barrel spring.
One skilled in the art knows that one of the primary factors in improving the efficiency of a movement is the quality of the pivoting of the various elements and the weakness of the friction involved. This point is particularly essential in the barrel, where the forces exerted are significant and defects in the guiding of the arbor and the drum may have non-negligible consequences for the power reserve.
Document CH 610178 proposes, with the goal of improving the pivot quality of the barrel, winding it cantilevered using a ball bearing. The ball bearing is driven into the inner ring of said bearing, while the outer ring is fastened in a bed formed in the plate. Furthermore, the drum is pivoted from the outside using runners with which it cooperates.
However, the presence of runners is particularly bothersome in terms of the bulk they create. Furthermore, experience shows that the precision of the device proposed in the aforementioned document is not very satisfactory. The present invention aims not only to offset this drawback, but also to improve the pivoting of the barrel.
More specifically, according to the invention, the drum is pivoted by a first ball bearing having an inner ring secured to the arbor, an intermediate ring, and an outer ring, one of the intermediate and outer rings being fastened to the barrel bridge, the other being secured to said bottom.
According to another aspect, the invention also relates to a barrel whereof the arbor is mounted flying, i.e. it is only pivoted by one of its ends, using a bearing having three co-planar rings, whereof one ring among the intermediate and outer rings is fastened to an element of the frame (bridge or plate), the other ring among the intermediate and outer rings is fastened to the bottom of the drum, and the inner ring is fastened to the arbor.
Other details will appear more clearly upon reading the following description, done in reference to the appended drawings, in which
The arbor 14 passes through the center of a drum 20. The drum is provided with an outer toothing 22 to drive a train of a watch. It comprises a bottom 23 and side walls forming its diameter, which define a bed. A countersink is formed inside the side walls. The drum 20 is flying to pivot in relation to the arbor 14.
A strip-spring 24 is arranged in the bed, fastened by a first end to the hook and by a second end to the drum, at the countersink.
A cover 28 closes the drum 20. The arbor 14 also passes through the center of said cover, the arbor and the cover being flying in reference to one another.
A ratchet wheel 30 is mounted secured to the arbor 14, for example using a screw 32. This wheel is designed to be driven by winding means known by those skilled in the art in order to wind the strip-spring.
A barrel bridge 33 is rigidly mounted on the plate, to allow the arbor 14 to pivot. The ratchet wheel 30 tops the bridge 33 and is screwed into the arbor 14. It may also be arranged at the other end of the arbor 14.
According to one important aspect of the invention, the bottom of the drum 23 is situated on the side of the barrel bridge 33. In this way, the drum 20 is pivoted, by means of its bottom 23, on the barrel bridge 33 using a ball bearing 34. According to the embodiment illustrated in
Advantageously, the bottom 23 may have a slight overthickness in order to reinforce it at the screw passage. Furthermore, this overthickness makes it possible to define slight play between the bottom 23 and the other elements of the bearing, preventing any superfluous friction. The heads of the screws fastening the intermediate ring may be placed in a recess 40 formed in the barrel bridge 33.
The bearing 34 therefore comprises an inner ring 42 provided with a circular central hole, in which the arbor 14 is designed to be placed. The rings of the bearing are configured so as to have bearing surfaces for the balls, these not needing to be outlined here. Bows may complete the rings so as to define the rolling path of the balls completely.
Of course, in light of the dimensions of a timepiece barrel 12, the bearings used are micro-bearings, the precision of which must be maximal so as to guarantee perfect positioning of the pivot axes and optimal guiding of the moving parts.
It will be noted that, according to the invention, the barrel bridge 33 has an opening for the flying passage of the arbor. In light of the presence of the bearing as described above, there is no need to form a bearing block for the pivoting of the arbor at the barrel bridge 33. Such a bearing block is also not useful at the bottom 23.
There is also no need for other peripheral guide means, which flyings up the entire space around the barrel for other moving parts. Furthermore, the fact that the intermediate ring 36, which makes up the connecting part to the barrel bridge 33 and therefore the reference element for the pivoting of the arbor 14 and the drum 20, has a relatively large diameter, in any event larger than if those elements were pivoted directly at their pivot axis, gives the movement of said elements better stability and greater precision. This is beneficial not only for the pivoting of the drum 20, but also for that of the arbor 14, which bears stresses much better than the barrel arbors of the state of the art, which are also pivoted by a ball bearing, but that is arranged directly at the center thereof. The efficiency obtained with a barrel as described above is substantially improved in relation to the barrels of the state of the art.
In the embodiment illustrated in
According to a first variant illustrated in
In a second variant proposed in
Although the proposed embodiments show, for the bearing 34, that the intermediate ring 36 is fastened to the barrel bridge 33 and the outer ring 38, at the bottom 23 of the barrel, this construction may be inverted. Thus, it is possible, without going beyond the scope of the invention, to fasten the intermediate ring 36 to the bottom 23 of the barrel and the outer ring 38 to the barrel bridge 33.
Furthermore, regarding the variant of
Thus, as proposed in
By adapting the construction of the movement, it is also possible to mount the ratchet wheel 30 on the plate side. In
Thus proposed is a timepiece whereof the various elements of the barrel are pivoted optimally, both in terms of guiding and the level of weakness of the friction. This is obtained without cluttering the plate around the barrel. Furthermore, the versions proposed in
The power reserve of such a barrel is improved, owing to its efficiency, which is greater than that of the state of the art. It is thus possible to use a weaker, and therefore thinner, spring to give the desired amplitude to the balance. The spring may therefore be wound over a larger number of revolutions in a same volume, and therefore store a greater amount of energy.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0603/10 | Apr 2010 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/056585 | 4/26/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/25/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/134960 | 11/3/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
808176 | Thalofer | Dec 1905 | A |
3974639 | Gilomen et al. | Aug 1976 | A |
4132061 | Mathys | Jan 1979 | A |
5278807 | Mathys | Jan 1994 | A |
6651633 | Jones | Nov 2003 | B1 |
7942573 | Kury | May 2011 | B2 |
20100322039 | Kury | Dec 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
610 178 | Apr 1979 | CH |
700 673 | Sep 2010 | CH |
2287717 | May 1976 | FR |
955 499 | Apr 1964 | GB |
2008046750 | Apr 2008 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report dated Sep. 2, 2011, corresponding to PCT/EP2011/056585. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130039155 A1 | Feb 2013 | US |