US140090A - Improvement in watch-regulators - Google Patents

Improvement in watch-regulators Download PDF

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US140090A
US140090A US140090DA US140090A US 140090 A US140090 A US 140090A US 140090D A US140090D A US 140090DA US 140090 A US140090 A US 140090A
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plate
watch
wheel
regulator
regulators
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G04HOROLOGY
    • G04BMECHANICALLY-DRIVEN CLOCKS OR WATCHES; MECHANICAL PARTS OF CLOCKS OR WATCHES IN GENERAL; TIME PIECES USING THE POSITION OF THE SUN, MOON OR STARS
    • G04B18/00Mechanisms for setting frequency
    • G04B18/02Regulator or adjustment devices; Indexing devices, e.g. raquettes
    • G04B18/023Regulator or adjustment devices; Indexing devices, e.g. raquettes with means for fine adjustment of the indexing device

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  • the sliding plate I having the upturned flange j, in combination with the watch-plate A, and the index-plate Gr having the groove 7; to receive the fiangej, and a rabbet to receive the narrow end of the plate I, substantially as described, and for the purpose'specified.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Measurement Of Unknown Time Intervals (AREA)

Description

N. STAFLIN.
Watch-Regulators.
NO. 140,090, Patentedjune17,1873.
I I I l/Zi/ if my 60.
AM. PHOTO-LITHOGRAPH/C co. MY (osaamvz's moms) UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE NICOLAS STAFLIN, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
IMPROVEMENT IN WATCH-REGULATORS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 140,090, dated J unc 17, 1873; application filed I October 12, 1872.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, NICOLAS STAFLIN, of Chicago, in the county of Cook and State of Illinois, have invented a new and Improved Watch'Regula-tor; and I do hereby declare the following to baa full, clear, and exact description of the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings forming part of this specification, in which- Fig. 1 is a plan "iew of the top plate of a watch. Fig. 2 is an edge view of the same, partly in section. Fig. 3 is an enlarged plan view of the regulator. Fig. 4 is an enlarged side view of the same, and Fig. 5 is a perspective view of the guide-plate by which the regulator is connected to the top plate of a watch.
Similar letters of reference in the accompanyiug drawings denote the same parts.
My invention has for its object to produce an improved regulator for watch es,which shall be unaflected by the expansion and contraction of the metals under the influence of heat and cold; and to this end the invention consists, first, in the construction of the regulator; secondly, in the combination therewith of the devices by which it is operated; and, thirdly, in the construction of these devices, as I will now proceed to describe.
In the accompanying drawings, A is the top plate of a watch, and B the balance-bridge. U is the regulator, mounted in the usual manmer upon the balance-bridge. It is composed of two narrow arms, d d, uniting at their outer ends to form a single point, e, and formed with ashort arm, F, at its base, midway between the arms d. To this short arm the hair-spring of the watch is connected. G is the indexplate secured to the watch-plate A, so that the point of the regulator shall sweep over the graduations upon its outer arc. The index-plate is formed with a curved slot nearly its entire length, and the watch-plate A,within this slot, is cut to form a threaded segmental recess, h, concentric with the pivot of the regulator. I is a small guide-plate, placed transversely within the slot of the index-plate, the upturned flange j, at its inner end, entering a groove, k, in the wider surface of the plate G, and. its outer or narrow end fitting a rabbet in the under edge of the plate, asshown. By
this construction the plate is guided in its j k. m is a small pinion, and n a worm-wheel with a single thread mounted upon a short transverse shaft, having its bearings in upturned ears 1 upon the sides of the guideplate, the center of which is cut out to permit the engagement of the worm-wheel with the threads of the segmental recess h. 0 is a vertical post provided with a horizontal wormwheel, 1), to engage with the pinion m. The post is held upon the guide-plate by fitting above the worm-wheel within a slot formed in an upturned arm, q, and by the contact of the worm-wheel p with the pinion. The guideplate is struck up from a single piece of metal into the requisite form for the reception of its various attachments. The regulator is connected to the gearing of the guide-plate by being fitted over the vertical worm-wheel n, as shown in Figs. 1 and 3, so that such wheel shall be directly in line with the point e and the pivot of the regulator, as well as the pins by which the hair-spring is connected to the short arm F. R is a small wheel secured to the post 0 above the arm q, and provided with finer graduations than those upon the indexplate. By operating this wheel, or by turning the post with a suitable key, motion is communicated to the worm-wheel a through the medium of the worm-wheel p and pinion m, which wheel a, engaging with the threads in the segmental recess h, moves the guide-plate and its attachments through the index-plate, carrying with them the regulator to the desired adjustment. The graduations upon the operating-wheel indicate fractional parts of those upon the index-plate, and may be re duced to such a degree of fineness as to note the forty-thousandth or even a lesser part of the whole number of graduations upon such plate.
Inasmuch as watches necessarily vary considerably in their record of time, some running faster than others, I design to first set them at the factory to determine their variation, and then stamp upon a convenient part of the case or works of each the exact adjustment required to compensate for the variations, the adjustment being indicated by the number of revolutions, or parts thereof, to be given the operating-wheel. Instead of marking the watch itself, a paper or card of instructions may accompany each.
By arranging the point of connection between the regulator and its operating devices directly in line with its pivot and point e, and with the pins which connect the hair-spring to the arm F, the regulator contracts and expands equally upon each side of the wheel, and the expansion and contraction of the top plate of the watch does not change the position of the regulator with respect to the graduations upon the index-plate, because the only connection between the regulator and top plate is through the worm-wheel m, and this wheel, restingin one thread of the recess 71, cannot be moved laterally.
Instead of forming the threaded segmental recess directly in the plate of the watch, it may be made in the index-plate, and for old watches I prefer this construction.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim is 1. The sliding plate I, constructed as described, and carrying the pinion m and wormwheels at p, for adjusting the regulator G, substantially as described, for the purpose specified.
2. The sliding plate I, having the upturned flange j, in combination with the watch-plate A, and the index-plate Gr having the groove 7; to receive the fiangej, and a rabbet to receive the narrow end of the plate I, substantially as described, and for the purpose'specified.
3. The combination of the graduated operating-wheel R with the sliding plate and its operating mechanism, the regulator O, the index-plate G, and the threaded segmental recess h, substantially as described, for the purpose specified.
Witnesses: NICOLAS STAFLIN.
NATHAN K. ELLswoR'rH, E. A. ELLSWORTH.
US140090D 1872-10-12 1872-10-12 Improvement in watch-regulators Expired - Lifetime US140090A (en)

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