The present invention concerns a watch comprising a rotating display disc, fitted with a series of numbers for displaying a date in an aperture, and drive means for rotating the disc, and wherein the display disc carries said series of numbers on one part of its circumference and at least one symbol arranged on another part of the disc so that it can appear in said aperture or in another, the drive means being capable of producing angular movements of the display disc with different amplitudes depending upon whether said series of numbers or said symbol are displayed.
It has been common for a long time to make watches displaying the phases of the moon in an aperture and the date in another aperture. With this two aperture arrangement, the moon disc and the date disc partially overlap, which increases the thickness of the construction. It is of course possible to reduce the thickness by placing the moon disc within the annular date disc and in the same plane, but the diameter of the moon disc must then be greatly reduced and the moon phase display becomes very small. Other methods of overcoming this drawback exist, for example replacing one of the discs with a hand indicator as provided by CH Patent No. 657 740, however the dial becomes much more cluttered and less attractive than with aperture displays.
EP Patent No. 735 442 proposes an electronic timepiece using a date display disc for displaying alternately, in the same aperture of the watch dial, the date or another piece of information that depends on the time, for example the day of the week. For this purpose, the series of dates and the symbols representing this other information are arranged on respective portions of the same circumference of the display disc. Each symbol only appears in the aperture in one position, as in a usual display using separate discs.
A basic idea of the present invention is using the date disc for displaying either the date or a momentary feature of a celestial body (phase of the moon, sunrise or sunset, etc.). More particularly, the invention proposes a watch of the type stated in the preamble hereinbefore, characterized in that said symbol arranged on the display disc is an image of a celestial body and in that the drive means are arranged for placing said image in several different positions in the aperture where it appears.
With this arrangement, the watch uses the display disc for displaying the date in a first operating mode and the celestial body image in another operating mode, called here the astronomy mode. The celestial body in question may be the moon, the position of its image in the aperture being altered each day in order to represent the current phase of the moon. Alternatively, or by way of complement, the celestial body in question may be the sun, the position of its image in the aperture representing during a day the rising, position in the sky and setting of the sun. The aperture for displaying the celestial body image can be either the aperture used for displaying the date, or a separate aperture.
This principle can be easily implemented in an electronic watch, particularly with means for driving the display disc that comprise an electric motor and a gear reducer, but it can also be achieved in a mechanical watch.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear from the following description of various embodiments, given by way of non-limiting example with reference to the annexed drawings.
Wristwatch 41 illustrated by FIGS. 1 to 3 is an electronic analogue display watch with several electric motors. The time display is achieved on a dial 42 by means of an hour hand 43, a minute hand 44 and a seconds hand 45, these three hands being able to be driven by a single motor or by several if it is a multi-function watch. The watch further includes means for displaying the phase of the moon in an aperture 46 arranged in dial 42, and calendar display means which indicate the date in the same aperture 46 and the number of the month on a fixed scale 47 of dial 42 by means of a rotating central disc 48 fitted with an index 49.
The display in aperture 46 is achieved by means of the display device 50 schematically shown in
Rotating display disc 51 is combined in the present case for displaying three distinct parameters in turn in aperture 46, namely:
the date owing to a row 60 of dates 1 to 31, arranged at equal or unequal intervals over only one part of the circumference of disc 51 and sufficiently spaced apart that only one of them appears at a time in aperture 46;
the moon phase by means of a light circular image 62 of the moon on a dark background 63;
the “end of life” state or discharge of the electric battery of the watch, by means of a conventional symbol 64 such as EOE (end of energy) or any other clearly recognisable graphic element.
Of course, the three groups of display elements 60, 62 and 64 are sufficiently spaced apart from each other so that two of them cannot appear at the same time in aperture 46. This aperture comprises two convex edges 66 and 67 arranged for “biting” in turn one part of the circular image 62 of the moon, whereas the minimum distance between them corresponds to the diameter of image 62 so that the full moon can be indicated when image 62 is just between them.
The operation of the display device described hereinbefore includes two modes which are controlled by the user, for example by switching using a push-button or a control crown 68 of the watch, and a third automatic mode consisting in displaying the discharged battery state by means of symbol 64. The first controlled mode is that shown in
The second display mode is the calendar mode, in which one of dates 1 to 31 is displayed in aperture 46 as shown in
According to another method, instead of being moved forward once per day, the moon image 62 could be moved forward at fixed intervals corresponding to a fraction of the duration of a lunation, this fraction being selected to correspond to an integer number of steps of motor 54.
Each of the first and second display modes can be permanent. However, the watch can also be arranged so as to permanently display normally one of these modes, for example the date display, and to pass to the other mode only temporarily, when the user actuates a control such as a push-button.
The third display mode is the automatic indication of the discharged battery state. In this state, the date or moon phase display is automatically suppressed and motor 54 is operated so that it brings the symbol EOE 64 in a fixed manner into aperture 46 until the battery voltage returns to a normal value.
Another display mode, instead of the third mode or in addition thereto, could consist in displaying in aperture 46 a function symbol located in the place of or next to state symbol 64, to indicate temporarily for example a particular function switched on by the user or by a professional carrying out maintenance.
The applications of the invention are not limited to the example described hereinbefore, but can extend to other indications as an alternative to the lunar and date indications. For example, if one uses a “large date” type date display, comprising a display disc for the units and a display disc for the tens of the date, moon image 62 could be provided on the units disc and appear in the aperture while the tens disc displays a blank.
It will also be noted that the drive means for the combined date and moon disc do not have to be electric, since one could devise a mechanical drive able to produce appropriate movements of the disc.
In the examples illustrated by FIGS. 4 to 7, the moon image of the preceding example is replaced by an image 70 of the sun on display disc 51. Aperture 46 is replaced by an aperture 71 that is of elongated shape horizontally, the bottom side 72 of which represents the horizon, whereas a central part 73 of the aperture is the right size for allowing a single date of disc 51 to be seen in the calendar display mode illustrated by
Of course, the different aforementioned embodiments can be combined with each other, for example by adding the sun image 70 to display disc 51 next to field 63 containing the moon image, in particular for showing the sunrise and sunset in aperture 46 in a similar manner to that described with reference to FIGS. 4 to 7. In the astronomy display mode, the watch could thus display the sun during the day and the moon during the night.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04019394.8 | Aug 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/08506 | 8/5/2005 | WO | 1/30/2007 |