US3676994A - Hand setting mechanism for watches - Google Patents

Hand setting mechanism for watches Download PDF

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Publication number
US3676994A
US3676994A US848642A US3676994DA US3676994A US 3676994 A US3676994 A US 3676994A US 848642 A US848642 A US 848642A US 3676994D A US3676994D A US 3676994DA US 3676994 A US3676994 A US 3676994A
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United States
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winding stem
hand
gear
minute
setting
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Expired - Lifetime
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US848642A
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Katsuhiko Morita
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DAINI KK
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DAINI KK
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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
    • G04B27/00Mechanical devices for setting the time indicating means
    • G04B27/02Mechanical devices for setting the time indicating means by making use of the winding means
    • G04B27/04Mechanical devices for setting the time indicating means by making use of the winding means with clutch wheel

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT A hand-setting mechanism for wrist and pocket watches having a single clutch gear directly, releasably coupling the watch winding stem to a gear train for setting the hands of a watch.
  • the clutch gear is coupled with the winding stem through a socket thereon releasably receiving an end of the winding stem.
  • Each of the mechanism gears has its axis of rotation in a given common plane passing through the longitudinal axis of the winding stem, and the cross-section of the arrangement has a minimum dimension so that watches provided with the mechanism can have minimum transverse and thickness dimensions.
  • This invention relates generally to watches and more particularly to hand-setting mechanisms for pocket and wrist watches.
  • the conventional hand-setting mechanism for watches has a gear train for setting the hands coupled to a watch winding stem through a clutch device having clutch gears with axially extending teeth.
  • the various gears are disposed in different planes such that the cross-section dimension of the mechanism is relatively large and the winding stem axis is necessarily spaced a greater distance from the watch dial than would be the case if the hand-setting mechanism were reduced in cross-section and made more compact.
  • Another object is to provide a hand-setting mechanism for watches with a minimum of component parts all arranged with a minimum cross-section and a minimum transverse dimension so that wrist watches provided with a mechanism according to the invention can be constructed thinner and more compact than was possible heretofore.
  • the hand-setting mechanism comprises a single clutch gear having a socket coaxial with the winding stem of a watch for releasably, selectively coupling the clutch gear to the winding stem.
  • a gear train in the mechanism for setting the hands is directly engaged with the clutch gear, and thereby to the winding stem.
  • the use of the single clutch gear shortens the mechanism in a radial direction of the watch and allows the mechanism to be reduced in crosssection so that more compact and thinner watches can be constructed when the invention is employed.
  • FIG. I is a fragmentary plan view of a watch provided with a known hand-setting mechanism
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-section view taken along section line 2-2 of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a fragmentary plan view of a watch provided with a hand-setting mechanism according to the invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-section view taken along section line 4-4 of FIG. 3.
  • a conventional hand-setting mechanism for a watch for example a wrist watch, illustrated fragmentarily, has a winding stem 1 to which is connected one of two toothed clutch gears of a clutch 2.
  • the clutch 2 is engaged and disengaged by axial manipulation of the stem and rotation thereof drives rotationally a bevel clutch gear 3, having an axial extension for rotationally mounting it as illustrated, for effecting setting of the hands of the watch.
  • the clutch gear 3 meshes with a setting wheel 4 which drives a minute wheel or gear 5 integrally connected to a minute pinion 6 which drives an hour wheel or gear 7 provided with an hour hand '15. Both the minute gear 5 and its pinion 6 are pivotally mounted on a spindle 6a as illustrated.
  • the hour gear 5 meshes with a cannon pinion 8 provided with a minute hand 14.
  • the winding stem 1 is provided with two axially spaced collars between which is disposed a pin of a pivoted setting lever 9 engaged with a yoke 10 operably connected to the clutch 2 and biased by a yoke spring II.
  • a setting lever spring 12 is provided in known manner and the above-described elements are mounted on a plate I3 as illustrated.
  • the hand-setting mechanism is actuated by manually manipulating the stem 1 for engaging the clutch 2 and disengagement is restored in known manner.
  • the setting gear 4 is necessary solely to couple the clutch and setting stem to the gear mechanism for setting the hands and could be dispensed with if direct coupling is effected between the clutch and the hand-setting gears.
  • the known construction has the gears arranged such that a considerable vertical distance, in the drawing, ex-
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 Mechanism according to the invention is illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4 in which primed reference numerals have been used to identify the parts thereof corresponding to the mechanism illustrated in FIGS. I and 2.
  • a winding stem 1 is provided and has squared" end which fits into an extension defining a socket 3a in a clutch gear 3.
  • the clutch gear socket is shaped to receive the squared end of the stem 1'. It has two collar-like elements integral therewith as illustrated defining a circumferential groove 3b.
  • the clutch gear 3' directly drives a minute wheel 5' having a pinion 6 driven therewith.
  • the minute wheel and pinion are rotationally mounted on a bearingjournalled on an upright projection 13a on a plate 13.
  • the remainder of the hand-setting mechanism is constructed similarly to that heretofore described.
  • An hour gear 7' is driven by the pinion 6" and the minute gear 5 drives a cannon pinion 8 which sets a minute hand 14'.
  • the remainder of the arrangement is similar to that heretofore described as to the remaining elements 9l2.
  • a hand-setting mechanism comprising, a minute gear, other gears driven from said minute gear for setting the hour and minute hands, a single clutch gear for selectively directly coupling the winding stem and the minute gear, said single clutch gear having means defining a socket selectively receiving an end of said winding stem the end of said winding stem mating internally with said socket, a longitudinal axis of said winding stem being disposed in a given plane, and said minute gear, said other gears, and said single clutch gear each have an axis of rotation disposed in said given plane.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromechanical Clocks (AREA)

Abstract

A hand-setting mechanism for wrist and pocket watches having a single clutch gear directly, releasably coupling the watch winding stem to a gear train for setting the hands of a watch. The clutch gear is coupled with the winding stem through a socket thereon releasably receiving an end of the winding stem. Each of the mechanism gears has its axis of rotation in a given common plane passing through the longitudinal axis of the winding stem, and the cross-section of the arrangement has a minimum dimension so that watches provided with the mechanism can have minimum transverse and thickness dimensions.

Description

United States Patent Morita [151 3,676,994 [451 July 18, 1972 [54] HAND SETTING MECHANISM FOR WATCHES [52] U.S. Cl ..58/68 [51] Int. Cl. .....G04b 27/04 [58] Field oiSearch ..58/34, 63, 73, 80, 85.5, 67, 58/68 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS R12,512 7/1906 Perrin ..58/68 2,574,430 11/1951 Allen ....58/34 X 1,099,307 6/1914 Menns FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 463,467 8/1913 France ..58/63 116 3/1870 Italy ..58/63 16,856 8/1905 Great Britain .....58/67 243,104 12/1891 Switzerland ..58/67 28,541 7/1903 Switzerland ....58/67 Primary Examiner-Richard B. Wilkinson Assistant ExaminerGeorge H. Miller, Jr. Attorney-Robert E. Burns and Emmanuel J. Lobato [57] ABSTRACT A hand-setting mechanism for wrist and pocket watches having a single clutch gear directly, releasably coupling the watch winding stem to a gear train for setting the hands of a watch. The clutch gear is coupled with the winding stem through a socket thereon releasably receiving an end of the winding stem. Each of the mechanism gears has its axis of rotation in a given common plane passing through the longitudinal axis of the winding stem, and the cross-section of the arrangement has a minimum dimension so that watches provided with the mechanism can have minimum transverse and thickness dimensions.
2 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures PATENTEDJUU 8 I912 3.676994 sum 1 or 2 FIG.2
'/ lil A HAND SETTING MECHANISM FOR WATCHES This invention relates generally to watches and more particularly to hand-setting mechanisms for pocket and wrist watches.
The conventional hand-setting mechanism for watches has a gear train for setting the hands coupled to a watch winding stem through a clutch device having clutch gears with axially extending teeth. The various gears are disposed in different planes such that the cross-section dimension of the mechanism is relatively large and the winding stem axis is necessarily spaced a greater distance from the watch dial than would be the case if the hand-setting mechanism were reduced in cross-section and made more compact.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide an improved handsetting mechanism for watches more easily and economically constructed.
Another object is to provide a hand-setting mechanism for watches with a minimum of component parts all arranged with a minimum cross-section and a minimum transverse dimension so that wrist watches provided with a mechanism according to the invention can be constructed thinner and more compact than was possible heretofore.
The hand-setting mechanism according to the invention comprises a single clutch gear having a socket coaxial with the winding stem of a watch for releasably, selectively coupling the clutch gear to the winding stem. A gear train in the mechanism for setting the hands is directly engaged with the clutch gear, and thereby to the winding stem. The use of the single clutch gear shortens the mechanism in a radial direction of the watch and allows the mechanism to be reduced in crosssection so that more compact and thinner watches can be constructed when the invention is employed.
Other features and advantages of the hand-setting mechanism for watches in accordance with the present invention will he better understood as described in the following specification and appended claims, in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
FIG. I is a fragmentary plan view of a watch provided with a known hand-setting mechanism;
FIG. 2, is a cross-section view taken along section line 2-2 of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3, is a fragmentary plan view of a watch provided with a hand-setting mechanism according to the invention; and
FIG. 4, is a cross-section view taken along section line 4-4 of FIG. 3.
As illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 2 a conventional hand-setting mechanism for a watch, for example a wrist watch, illustrated fragmentarily, has a winding stem 1 to which is connected one of two toothed clutch gears of a clutch 2. The clutch 2 is engaged and disengaged by axial manipulation of the stem and rotation thereof drives rotationally a bevel clutch gear 3, having an axial extension for rotationally mounting it as illustrated, for effecting setting of the hands of the watch.
The clutch gear 3 meshes with a setting wheel 4 which drives a minute wheel or gear 5 integrally connected to a minute pinion 6 which drives an hour wheel or gear 7 provided with an hour hand '15. Both the minute gear 5 and its pinion 6 are pivotally mounted on a spindle 6a as illustrated. The hour gear 5 meshes with a cannon pinion 8 provided with a minute hand 14.
The winding stem 1 is provided with two axially spaced collars between which is disposed a pin of a pivoted setting lever 9 engaged with a yoke 10 operably connected to the clutch 2 and biased by a yoke spring II. A setting lever spring 12 is provided in known manner and the above-described elements are mounted on a plate I3 as illustrated.
It will be understood that the hand-setting mechanism is actuated by manually manipulating the stem 1 for engaging the clutch 2 and disengagement is restored in known manner. It can be seen that the setting gear 4 is necessary solely to couple the clutch and setting stem to the gear mechanism for setting the hands and could be dispensed with if direct coupling is effected between the clutch and the hand-setting gears. Moreover, the known construction has the gears arranged such that a considerable vertical distance, in the drawing, ex-
ists between horizontal planes within which the gears lie and the plane of the axis of the clutch and the winding stem as can be seen in FIG. 2. Thus the thickness of a watch may be reduced by reducing the cross-section of the mechanism illustrated in FIG. 2.
Mechanism according to the invention is illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4 in which primed reference numerals have been used to identify the parts thereof corresponding to the mechanism illustrated in FIGS. I and 2. As can be seen in the drawings in FIG. 3 a winding stem 1 is provided and has squared" end which fits into an extension defining a socket 3a in a clutch gear 3. It being understood that the clutch gear socket is shaped to receive the squared end of the stem 1'. It has two collar-like elements integral therewith as illustrated defining a circumferential groove 3b. The clutch gear 3' directly drives a minute wheel 5' having a pinion 6 driven therewith. The minute wheel and pinion are rotationally mounted on a bearingjournalled on an upright projection 13a on a plate 13.
The remainder of the hand-setting mechanism is constructed similarly to that heretofore described. An hour gear 7' is driven by the pinion 6" and the minute gear 5 drives a cannon pinion 8 which sets a minute hand 14'. The remainder of the arrangement is similar to that heretofore described as to the remaining elements 9l2.
It can be seen from the plan view in FIG. 3 of mechanism according to the invention that the longitudinal axis of the winding stem is in a same plane as that in which the axis of rotation of the hand-setting gears 5'-8' are disposed. Thus the extent of the gears in a radial direction is reduced. The need of a setting gear 4 is eliminated and the cross-section dimension of the arrangement is reduced so that the stem is closer to the watch dial, not shown. The invention accordingly provides a much more compact and more easily constructed hand-setting mechanism allowing thinner and smaller watches to be constructed when mechanism according to the invention is used therein.
What I claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
I. In a watch having an hour hand, a minute hand and an axially displaceable and rotationally mounted winding stem, a hand-setting mechanism comprising, a minute gear, other gears driven from said minute gear for setting the hour and minute hands, a single clutch gear for selectively directly coupling the winding stem and the minute gear, said single clutch gear having means defining a socket selectively receiving an end of said winding stem the end of said winding stem mating internally with said socket, a longitudinal axis of said winding stem being disposed in a given plane, and said minute gear, said other gears, and said single clutch gear each have an axis of rotation disposed in said given plane.
2. In a watch having an hour hand, a minute hand and a winding stem, a hand-setting mechanism according to claim I, in which said socket and said end of said winding stem are coaxial.

Claims (2)

1. In a watch having an hour hand, a minute hand and an axially displaceable and rotationally mounted winding stem, a handsetting mechanism comprising, a minute gear, other gears driven from said minute gear for setting the hour and minute hands, a single clutch gear for selectively directly coupling the winding stem and the minute gear, said single clutch gear having means defining a socket selectively receiving an end of said winding stem the end of said winding stem mating internally with said socket, a longitudinal axis of said winding stem being disposed in a given plane, and said minute gear, said other gears, and said single clutch gear each have an axis of rotation disposed in said given plane.
2. In a watch having an hour hand, a minute hand and a winding stem, a hand-setting mechanism according to claim 1, in which said socket and said end of said winding stem are coaxial.
US848642A 1969-08-08 1969-08-08 Hand setting mechanism for watches Expired - Lifetime US3676994A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2493001A1 (en) * 1980-10-23 1982-04-30 Ebauchesfabrik Eta Ag SLIDING CONTROL DEVICE FOR WATCH

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US12512A (en) * 1855-03-13 Gkain-cleawee
CH28541A (en) * 1903-07-18 1904-05-31 Mueller & Vaucher Winding and time-setting mechanism
GB190516856A (en) * 1905-08-19 1906-08-16 Charles Glauser-Perrin Improvements in Keyless Winding and Hand-setting Mechanism for Watches.
FR463467A (en) * 1913-08-01 1914-02-24 Jean Baptiste Jeulot Watch without glass, with unbreakable pendulum axis pivots in the event of a fall thanks to a suspension-chariot-shock absorber, with winding and time-setting pull simplified combination
US1099307A (en) * 1913-04-30 1914-06-09 Chelsea Clock Company Winding and setting mechanism.
CH243104A (en) * 1938-03-14 1946-06-30 Zwerina Rudolf Chamber rocket.
US2574430A (en) * 1948-12-06 1951-11-06 Edgar A Allen Synchronous motor clockwork

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US12512A (en) * 1855-03-13 Gkain-cleawee
CH28541A (en) * 1903-07-18 1904-05-31 Mueller & Vaucher Winding and time-setting mechanism
GB190516856A (en) * 1905-08-19 1906-08-16 Charles Glauser-Perrin Improvements in Keyless Winding and Hand-setting Mechanism for Watches.
US1099307A (en) * 1913-04-30 1914-06-09 Chelsea Clock Company Winding and setting mechanism.
FR463467A (en) * 1913-08-01 1914-02-24 Jean Baptiste Jeulot Watch without glass, with unbreakable pendulum axis pivots in the event of a fall thanks to a suspension-chariot-shock absorber, with winding and time-setting pull simplified combination
CH243104A (en) * 1938-03-14 1946-06-30 Zwerina Rudolf Chamber rocket.
US2574430A (en) * 1948-12-06 1951-11-06 Edgar A Allen Synchronous motor clockwork

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2493001A1 (en) * 1980-10-23 1982-04-30 Ebauchesfabrik Eta Ag SLIDING CONTROL DEVICE FOR WATCH

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