US3688491A - Timer - Google Patents

Timer Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3688491A
US3688491A US120297A US3688491DA US3688491A US 3688491 A US3688491 A US 3688491A US 120297 A US120297 A US 120297A US 3688491D A US3688491D A US 3688491DA US 3688491 A US3688491 A US 3688491A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
piece
wheel
push
timer
zero
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US120297A
Inventor
Gerald Dubois
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3688491A publication Critical patent/US3688491A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G04HOROLOGY
    • G04FTIME-INTERVAL MEASURING
    • G04F7/00Apparatus for measuring unknown time intervals by non-electric means
    • G04F7/04Apparatus for measuring unknown time intervals by non-electric means using a mechanical oscillator
    • G04F7/06Apparatus for measuring unknown time intervals by non-electric means using a mechanical oscillator running only during the time interval to be measured, e.g. stop-watch

Definitions

  • a zero-setting push-piece acts indirectly on an hours disc through an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting mm.
  • the hours disc is driven by a star-wheel intermittently driven by a finger-piece, and held by a jumper.
  • the finger-piece and jumper are disengaged from the star-wheel.
  • This invention relates to timers comprising pushpiece mechanisms for starting, stopping and returning to zero the various indicator organs.
  • Various timers of this type are known, for example that disclosed in US. Pat. No. 3,045,418.
  • It is an object of the invention to provide a timer comprising a push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a push-piece for returning the time indicating members of the timer to a zero position, the said pushpiece for starting and stopping the movement being provided with the means for winding the motor spring of the timer.
  • the zero-setting push-piece acts indirectly on an hours disc through an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting cam.
  • One aspect of the invention concerns a timer comprising a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer, a second push-piece movable between an inoperative position and an operative position for returning time-indicating members of the timer to a zero position, an hours-indicating member driven by means of a star wheel having a plurality of teeth, means engageable with the teeth of the star wheel for intermittently driving the star wheel, and a spring-urged member applied between adjacent teeth of the star wheel to normally hold the star wheel in a position corresponding to any given hour indication of the hours-indicating member.
  • the improvement provided by the invention comprises an eccentric wheel in driving relationship with the star wheel, and a zero-setting cam angularly fixed to the eccentric wheel, movement of the second push-piece from the inoperative position to the operative position actuating:
  • c. means cooperating with said zero-setting cam to return the star wheel hours indicating member to a zero position.
  • FIG. 1 is a plan view, from the dial side, of the first bridge of a timer mechanism according to the invention, with the dial and hours-disc removed;
  • FIG. 2 is an elevational view partly in cross-section, of a detail of FIG. 3 but in another position;
  • FIG. 3 is an enlarged cross-sectional view along line IIIllfFIG. l;
  • FIG. 4 is a partial plan view of the timer mechanism but with the first bridge removed.
  • the timer shown comprises time indicating members composed of a schematically indicated hours disc 1 carrying digits visible through apertures in the dial (not shown), a minutes-hand, not shown, mounted on the pipe 2 of a minutes-wheel 3, and a seconds-hand, not shown, mounted on the pipe 4 of a seconds wheel staff 5.
  • the hour disc 1 is formed in one-piece with a starwheel 6 having twelve teeth which is intermittently driven in rotation by a finger-piece 7 of a wheel 8.
  • star wheel is normally held in a position corresponding to the display of one of the digits on the hours wheel by means of a spring loaded jumper 23 which applies between adjacent teeth of the star wheel.
  • Wheel 8 is mounted on and axially movable along a cannon 16' of an eccentrically mounted center wheel 9 and is driven with the wheel 9 by means of a pin 10 fixed in the wheel 9 and which penetrates in a hole in the wheel 8. Additionally, the wheel 8 has a groove 11 into which a pliable fork 12 fits, this fork being fixed on the first bridge and being movable by an extension 13 of the hourshammer 14.
  • the flexible fork 12 tends to raise the wheel 8, the position of this fork being adjusted by the extension 13 which, by moving along this fork when the. hourhammer 14 is actuated, bears on the inclined plane 15, and thus lowers the fork 12, displacing the finger-piece 7 out of the path of the star-wheel 6, as shown in FIG. 2.
  • Wheel 9 drives the minutes-wheel 3 by means of an intermediate wheel 18 (FIGS. 3 and 4).
  • Wheel 9 and its cannon 16' are friction-mounted as known on a staff 16 (FIGS. 3 and 4) and the cannon 16' is fitted with a conventional zero setting heart-piece 17 for the minuteshand.
  • a central push-piece 41 aligned along the 12 o'clock axis has a knurled head for winding up the main spring of the timer (not shown) which is carried out, as known by means of a pinion 43 (FIG. 4) meshing with a barrel wheel, not shown.
  • Push-piece 41 also serves for starting and stopping the timer and for this purpose works through a lever 44 with a standard column-wheel 45 which actuates a flirt 46 to stop the balance 47.
  • the lever 44 is pressed down, and the column wheel 45 causes the flirt to block the balance.
  • the flirt moves back to the position shown in FIG. 4 and the balance 47 is freed so that the timer starts operating again.
  • the other push-piece 42 is used to set the timer to zero, and can operate only when the timer is stopped column wheel 45 serving to prevent actuation of the push-piece 42 when the timer is running.
  • Zerosetting of the seconds-hand and minutes-hand is standard and takes place by means of the hammers 48 and 49 which act on the zero-setting heart pieces 19 and 17 respectively when the push-piece 42 is actuated.
  • the hour-disc is returned to zero, while the timer is stopped, by means of the zero-setting push-piece 42 which acts by means of a pin 50 on the hammer level 14 (FIG. 1), the hammer 14a of which comes into contact with the heart-piece 20 which is fixed to a zero-setting wheel 21 which meshes with a wheel 22, the latter being fixed to and coaxial with the star-wheel 6 carrying the hour-disc 1.
  • the timer can be restarted by means of the central pushpiece 41.
  • a timer having time indicator members comprising an hours-disc, a minutes-hand and a seconds-hand mounted concentrically, a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a second push-piece for returning the time indicator members to zero
  • the improvement comprising means for locking said second push-piece while the timer is running, resetting means actuated by said second push-piece including an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting cam and engaging a wheel concentric with and rotating with said hoursdisc, means for driving said hours-disc in rotation comprising a star-wheel angularly fixed thereto and a finger-piece on a driven wheel rotated by an eccentrically mounted center wheel, said driven wheel being axially movable in relation to said center wheel between an operative position in which the finger-piece is engageable with the star wheel and an inoperative position in which the fingerpiece is spaced apart from the star wheel, and means for moving the driven wheel from the operative position to the inoperative position upon actuation of the second push piece to return the time indicator members to zero.
  • a timer having time indicator members comprising an hours-disc, a minutes-hand and a seconds-hand mounted concentrically, a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a second push-piece for returning the time indicator members to zero
  • means for driving said hours-disc comprising a star wheel rotationally coupled with said hoursdisc and a driven wheel carrying a finger piece engageable with teeth of said star wheel to advance it step-bystep, said driven wheel being movable axially relative to said star wheel to disengage said finger piece from said star wheel, spring jumper means engageable with said star wheel to retain it in the position to which it is advanced by said finger piece, means for resetting said time indicator members comprising heart cams rotationally coupled with said hours-disc, minutes-hand and seconds-hand respectively and hammer means actuatable by said second push-piece and engageable respectively with said heart cams to return said time indicator members to zero, means actuatable by said second push-piece for moving said driven wheel axially relative to the star wheel to disengage said
  • a timer according to claim 2 further comprising means actuatable by said second push-piece to disengage said spring jumper means from said star wheel when said second push-piece is actuated to return the time indicator members to zero.
  • a timer comprising a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer, a second push-piece movable between an inoperative position and an operative position for returning time-indicating members of the timer to a zero position, an hours-indicating member driven by means of a star wheel having a plurality of teeth, means engageable with the teeth of the star wheel for intermittently driving the star wheel, and a springurged member applied between adjacent teeth of the star wheel to normally hold the star wheel in a position corresponding to any given hour indication of the hours-indicating member, the improvement comprising an eccentric wheel in driving relationship with the star wheel, and a zero setting cam angularly fixed to the eccentric wheel, movement of the second push-piece from the inoperative position to the operative position actuating:
  • Timer according to claim 5, comprising means for locking the second push-piece in the inoperative position while the timer is running.
  • Timer according to claim 5 in which the pushpiece for starting and stopping the timer comprises means for winding a motor spring of the timer.
  • the means for driving the star wheel comprise a finger-piece on a driven wheel rotated by an eccentrically mounted center wheel, said driven wheel being axially movable in relation to said center wheel between an operative position in which the fingerpiece is engageable with the star wheel and an inoperative position in which the finger-piece is spaced apart from the teeth of the starwheel.
  • Timer according to claim 8 comprising a pivotally mounted hammer lever having first and second ends, a hammer at the first end of said hammer lever and an extension at the second end of said hammer lever, means for pivoting said hammer lever between an inoperative position and an operative position upon movement of the second push-piece between the inoperative position and the operative position respectively, said hammer being spaced apart from the zero-setting cam in the inoperative position of the hammer lever and engaging with the zero-setting cam in the operative position of the hammer lever; said driven wheel being mounted on a flexible arm, said extension cooperating with the flexible arm to move the driven wheel from the operative position to the inoperative position when the hammer lever is moved from the inoperative position to the operative position.

Abstract

A timer has push-piece mechanisms for starting, stopping and returning time indicating members of the timer to a zero position. A zero-setting push-piece acts indirectly on an hours disc through an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting cam. The hours disc is driven by a star-wheel intermittently driven by a finger-piece, and held by a jumper. When the zero-setting pushpiece is actuated, the finger-piece and jumper are disengaged from the star-wheel.

Description

United States Patent Dubois 1 Sept. 5, 1972 [54] TIMER 3,045,418 7/ l962 l-leuer ..'.58/74 [72] Inventor: G l Dubois 345 La Lieu, Vaud, 3,210,925 10/1965 HFPIB! ..t ..58/74 X Switzerland 3,430,434 3/1969 Ptguet ..58/74 [22] Filed: March 1971 Primary Examiner-Richard B. Wilkinson [211 App] 120,297 Assistant ExaminerGeorge H. Miller, Jr.
Attomey-Robert E. Burns and Emmanuel J. bobato Related US. Application Data I [63] Continuation-impart of Ser. No. 868,312, Oct.
22, 1969, abandoned.
[30] Foreign Application Priority Data Oct. 28, 1968 Switzerland ..16048/68 [52] 0.8. CI. ..58/74 [51] Int. Cl ..G04f 7/04 [58] Field of Search ..58/74-79 [56] ReiereneesCited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,543,506 12/1970 Du Bois et a1. ..58/74 [57] ABSTRACT A timer has push-piece mechanisms for starting,
stopping and returning time indicating members of the timer to a zero position. A zero-setting push-piece acts indirectly on an hours disc through an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting mm. The hours disc is driven by a star-wheel intermittently driven by a finger-piece, and held by a jumper. When the zero-setting pushpiece is actuated, the finger-piece and jumper are disengaged from the star-wheel.
10 Claims, 4 Drawing PATENTEDSU 51972 -SHEET1UF 3 PATENTEDSEP 51912 sum 2 .ur a
Essay minnow 51912 3.688.491 SHEETZUF 3 Ii! I TIMER This application is a continuation-in-part of abandoned application Ser. No. 868,312 filed on Oct. 22, 1969.
This invention relates to timers comprising pushpiece mechanisms for starting, stopping and returning to zero the various indicator organs. Various timers of this type are known, for example that disclosed in US. Pat. No. 3,045,418.
It is an object of the invention to provide a timer comprising a push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a push-piece for returning the time indicating members of the timer to a zero position, the said pushpiece for starting and stopping the movement being provided with the means for winding the motor spring of the timer. The zero-setting push-piece acts indirectly on an hours disc through an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting cam.
One aspect of the invention concerns a timer comprising a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer, a second push-piece movable between an inoperative position and an operative position for returning time-indicating members of the timer to a zero position, an hours-indicating member driven by means of a star wheel having a plurality of teeth, means engageable with the teeth of the star wheel for intermittently driving the star wheel, and a spring-urged member applied between adjacent teeth of the star wheel to normally hold the star wheel in a position corresponding to any given hour indication of the hours-indicating member. The improvement provided by the invention comprises an eccentric wheel in driving relationship with the star wheel, and a zero-setting cam angularly fixed to the eccentric wheel, movement of the second push-piece from the inoperative position to the operative position actuating:
a. means for disengaging said driving means from the teeth of the star wheel;
b. means for disengaging the spring urged member from between adjacent teeth of the star wheel; and
c. means cooperating with said zero-setting cam to return the star wheel hours indicating member to a zero position.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a plan view, from the dial side, of the first bridge of a timer mechanism according to the invention, with the dial and hours-disc removed;
FIG. 2 is an elevational view partly in cross-section, of a detail of FIG. 3 but in another position;
FIG. 3 is an enlarged cross-sectional view along line IIIllfFIG. l; and
FIG. 4 is a partial plan view of the timer mechanism but with the first bridge removed.
The timer shown comprises time indicating members composed of a schematically indicated hours disc 1 carrying digits visible through apertures in the dial (not shown), a minutes-hand, not shown, mounted on the pipe 2 of a minutes-wheel 3, and a seconds-hand, not shown, mounted on the pipe 4 of a seconds wheel staff 5.
The hour disc 1 is formed in one-piece with a starwheel 6 having twelve teeth which is intermittently driven in rotation by a finger-piece 7 of a wheel 8. The
star wheel is normally held in a position corresponding to the display of one of the digits on the hours wheel by means of a spring loaded jumper 23 which applies between adjacent teeth of the star wheel. Wheel 8 is mounted on and axially movable along a cannon 16' of an eccentrically mounted center wheel 9 and is driven with the wheel 9 by means of a pin 10 fixed in the wheel 9 and which penetrates in a hole in the wheel 8. Additionally, the wheel 8 has a groove 11 into which a pliable fork 12 fits, this fork being fixed on the first bridge and being movable by an extension 13 of the hourshammer 14.
The flexible fork 12 tends to raise the wheel 8, the position of this fork being adjusted by the extension 13 which, by moving along this fork when the. hourhammer 14 is actuated, bears on the inclined plane 15, and thus lowers the fork 12, displacing the finger-piece 7 out of the path of the star-wheel 6, as shown in FIG. 2.
Wheel 9 drives the minutes-wheel 3 by means of an intermediate wheel 18 (FIGS. 3 and 4). Wheel 9 and its cannon 16' are friction-mounted as known on a staff 16 (FIGS. 3 and 4) and the cannon 16' is fitted with a conventional zero setting heart-piece 17 for the minuteshand.
On the seconds-wheel staff 5 is friction-mounted, as known, the seconds-wheel pipe 4, fitted with a conventional zero-setting heart-piece 19, FIGS. 3 and 4.
A central push-piece 41 aligned along the 12 o'clock axis has a knurled head for winding up the main spring of the timer (not shown) which is carried out, as known by means of a pinion 43 (FIG. 4) meshing with a barrel wheel, not shown. Push-piece 41 also serves for starting and stopping the timer and for this purpose works through a lever 44 with a standard column-wheel 45 which actuates a flirt 46 to stop the balance 47. By pressing in the push-piece 41, the lever 44 is pressed down, and the column wheel 45 causes the flirt to block the balance. When the push-piece 41 is moved out again, the flirt moves back to the position shown in FIG. 4 and the balance 47 is freed so that the timer starts operating again.
The other push-piece 42 is used to set the timer to zero, and can operate only when the timer is stopped column wheel 45 serving to prevent actuation of the push-piece 42 when the timer is running. Zerosetting of the seconds-hand and minutes-hand is standard and takes place by means of the hammers 48 and 49 which act on the zero-setting heart pieces 19 and 17 respectively when the push-piece 42 is actuated.
The hour-disc is returned to zero, while the timer is stopped, by means of the zero-setting push-piece 42 which acts by means of a pin 50 on the hammer level 14 (FIG. 1), the hammer 14a of which comes into contact with the heart-piece 20 which is fixed to a zero-setting wheel 21 which meshes with a wheel 22, the latter being fixed to and coaxial with the star-wheel 6 carrying the hour-disc 1.
At the moment when the hammer 14a touches the heart-piece 20, the extension 13 of the hammer lever 14 comes into contact with the inclined plane 15 of the fork 12 and lowers the wheel 8 to the position shown in FIG. 2 where it is out of the trajectory of the star-wheel 6. At the same moment, the two other hammers 48 and 49 bear on the heart-pieces l7 and 19, returning the minutes-hand and the seconds-hand to zero, as known, while the hammer 14a turns the heart-piece 20, wheel 21, and wheel 22 to being the hours disc back to the zero position.
While the timer is being set to zero, the end of extension 13 moves the jumper 23 of the star wheel 6 out of contact with the star wheel 6, thus permitting a particularly smooth return to zero.
Once the zero-setting push-piece is released, the timer can be restarted by means of the central pushpiece 41.
What is claimed is:
1. In a timer having time indicator members comprising an hours-disc, a minutes-hand and a seconds-hand mounted concentrically, a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a second push-piece for returning the time indicator members to zero, the improvement comprising means for locking said second push-piece while the timer is running, resetting means actuated by said second push-piece including an eccentric wheel carrying a zero-setting cam and engaging a wheel concentric with and rotating with said hoursdisc, means for driving said hours-disc in rotation comprising a star-wheel angularly fixed thereto and a finger-piece on a driven wheel rotated by an eccentrically mounted center wheel, said driven wheel being axially movable in relation to said center wheel between an operative position in which the finger-piece is engageable with the star wheel and an inoperative position in which the fingerpiece is spaced apart from the star wheel, and means for moving the driven wheel from the operative position to the inoperative position upon actuation of the second push piece to return the time indicator members to zero.
2. In a timer having time indicator members comprising an hours-disc, a minutes-hand and a seconds-hand mounted concentrically, a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a second push-piece for returning the time indicator members to zero, the combination of means for driving said hours-disc comprising a star wheel rotationally coupled with said hoursdisc and a driven wheel carrying a finger piece engageable with teeth of said star wheel to advance it step-bystep, said driven wheel being movable axially relative to said star wheel to disengage said finger piece from said star wheel, spring jumper means engageable with said star wheel to retain it in the position to which it is advanced by said finger piece, means for resetting said time indicator members comprising heart cams rotationally coupled with said hours-disc, minutes-hand and seconds-hand respectively and hammer means actuatable by said second push-piece and engageable respectively with said heart cams to return said time indicator members to zero, means actuatable by said second push-piece for moving said driven wheel axially relative to the star wheel to disengage said finger piece from said star wheel when said second push-piece is actuated to return said time indicator members to zero, and means for locking said second push-piece while the timer is running.
3. A timer according to claim 2, further comprising means actuatable by said second push-piece to disengage said spring jumper means from said star wheel when said second push-piece is actuated to return the time indicator members to zero.
4. A timer according to claim 2 in which said heart cam for resetting said hours-disc is coaxial with and fixed relative to a gear wheel eccentric of said hoursdisc and meshing with a second gear wheel concentric with and fixed relative to said hour-disc.
5. In a timer comprising a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer, a second push-piece movable between an inoperative position and an operative position for returning time-indicating members of the timer to a zero position, an hours-indicating member driven by means of a star wheel having a plurality of teeth, means engageable with the teeth of the star wheel for intermittently driving the star wheel, and a springurged member applied between adjacent teeth of the star wheel to normally hold the star wheel in a position corresponding to any given hour indication of the hours-indicating member, the improvement comprising an eccentric wheel in driving relationship with the star wheel, and a zero setting cam angularly fixed to the eccentric wheel, movement of the second push-piece from the inoperative position to the operative position actuating:
a. means for disengaging said driving means from the teeth of the star wheel;
b. means for disengaging the spring-urged member from between adjacent teeth of the star wheel; and
0. means cooperating with said zero-setting cam to return the star wheel and hours indicating member to a zero position.
6. Timer according to claim 5, comprising means for locking the second push-piece in the inoperative position while the timer is running.
7. Timer according to claim 5 in which the pushpiece for starting and stopping the timer comprises means for winding a motor spring of the timer.
8. Timer according to claim 5, in which the means for driving the star wheel comprise a finger-piece on a driven wheel rotated by an eccentrically mounted center wheel, said driven wheel being axially movable in relation to said center wheel between an operative position in which the fingerpiece is engageable with the star wheel and an inoperative position in which the finger-piece is spaced apart from the teeth of the starwheel.
9. Timer according to claim 8, comprising a pivotally mounted hammer lever having first and second ends, a hammer at the first end of said hammer lever and an extension at the second end of said hammer lever, means for pivoting said hammer lever between an inoperative position and an operative position upon movement of the second push-piece between the inoperative position and the operative position respectively, said hammer being spaced apart from the zero-setting cam in the inoperative position of the hammer lever and engaging with the zero-setting cam in the operative position of the hammer lever; said driven wheel being mounted on a flexible arm, said extension cooperating with the flexible arm to move the driven wheel from the operative position to the inoperative position when the hammer lever is moved from the inoperative position to the operative position.
10. Timer according to claim 9, in which said extension forms the means for disengaging the spring-urged member from between adjacent teeth of the star wheel.

Claims (10)

1. In a timer having time indicator members comprising an hoursdisc, a minutes-hand and a seconds-hand mounted concentrically, a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a second push-piece for returning the time indicator members to zero, the improvement comprising means for locking said second push-piece while the timer is running, resetting means actuated by said second push-piece including an eccentric wheel carrying a zerosetting cam and engaging a wheel concentric with and rotating with said hours-disc, means for driving said hours-disc in rotation comprising a star-wheel angularly fixed thereto and a finger-piece on a driven wheel rotated by an eccentrically mounted center wheel, said driven wheel being axially movable in relation to said center wheel between an operative position in which the finger-piece is engageable with the star wheel and an inoperative position in which the finger-piece is spaced apart from the star wheel, and means for moving the driven wheel from the operative position to the inoperative position upon actuation of the second push-piece to return the time indicator members to zero.
2. In a timer having time indicator members comprising an hours-disc, a minutes-hand and a seconds-hand mounted concentrically, a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer and a second push-piece for returning the time indicator members to zero, the combination of means for driving said hours-disc comprising a star wheel rotationally coupled with said hours-disc and a driven wheel carrying a finger piece engageable with teeth of said star wheel to advance it step-by-step, said driven wheel being movable axially relative to said star wheel to disengage said finger piece from said star wheel, spring jumper means engageable with said star wheel to retain it in the position to which it is advanced by said finger piece, means for resetting said time indicator members comprising heart cams rotationally coupled with said hours-disc, minutes-hand and seconds-hand respectively and hammer means actuatable by said second push-piece and engageable respectively with said heart cams to return said time indicator members to zero, means actuatable by said second push-piece for moving said driven wheel axially relative to the star wheel to disengage said finger piece from said star wheel when said second push-piece is actuated to return said time indicator members to zero, and means for locking said second push-piece while the timer is running.
3. A timer according to claim 2, further comprising means actuatable by said second push-piece to disengage said spring jumper means from said star wheel when said second push-piece is actuated to return the time indicator members to zero.
4. A timer according to claim 2 in which said heart cam for resetting said hours-disc is coaxial with and fixed relative to a gear wheel eccentric of said hours-disc and meshing with a second gear wheel concentric with and fixed relative to said hour-disc.
5. In a timer comprising a first push-piece for starting and stopping the timer, a second push-piece movable between an inoperative position and an operative position for returning time-indicating members of the timer to a zero position, an hours-indicating member driven by means of a star wheel having a plurality of teeth, means engageable with the teeth of the star wheel for intermittently driving the star wheel, and a spring-urged member applied between adjacent teeth of the star wheel to normally hold the star wheel in a position corresponding to any given hour indication of the hours-indicating member, the improvement comprising an eccentric wheel in driving relationship with the star wheel, and a zero setting cam angularly fixed to the eccentric wheel, movement of the second push-piece from the inoperative position to the operative position actuating: a. means for disengaging said driving means from the teeth of the star wheel; b. means for disengaging the spring-urged member from between adjacent teeth of the star wheel; and c. means cooperating with said zero-setting cam to retUrn the star wheel and hours indicating member to a zero position.
6. Timer according to claim 5, comprising means for locking the second push-piece in the inoperative position while the timer is running.
7. Timer according to claim 5 in which the push-piece for starting and stopping the timer comprises means for winding a motor spring of the timer.
8. Timer according to claim 5, in which the means for driving the star wheel comprise a finger-piece on a driven wheel rotated by an eccentrically mounted center wheel, said driven wheel being axially movable in relation to said center wheel between an operative position in which the fingerpiece is engageable with the star wheel and an inoperative position in which the finger-piece is spaced apart from the teeth of the star-wheel.
9. Timer according to claim 8, comprising a pivotally mounted hammer lever having first and second ends, a hammer at the first end of said hammer lever and an extension at the second end of said hammer lever, means for pivoting said hammer lever between an inoperative position and an operative position upon movement of the second push-piece between the inoperative position and the operative position respectively, said hammer being spaced apart from the zero-setting cam in the inoperative position of the hammer lever and engaging with the zero-setting cam in the operative position of the hammer lever; said driven wheel being mounted on a flexible arm, said extension cooperating with the flexible arm to move the driven wheel from the operative position to the inoperative position when the hammer lever is moved from the inoperative position to the operative position.
10. Timer according to claim 9, in which said extension forms the means for disengaging the spring-urged member from between adjacent teeth of the star wheel.
US120297A 1968-10-28 1971-03-02 Timer Expired - Lifetime US3688491A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CH1604868A CH507553A (en) 1968-10-28 1968-10-28 Time counter

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3688491A true US3688491A (en) 1972-09-05

Family

ID=4414059

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US120297A Expired - Lifetime US3688491A (en) 1968-10-28 1971-03-02 Timer

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US3688491A (en)
CH (2) CH1604868A4 (en)
DE (1) DE1953497C3 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4100728A (en) * 1976-11-26 1978-07-18 Mattel, Inc. Mechanical digital stopwatch

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3045418A (en) * 1960-06-07 1962-07-24 Ed Heuer & Co Sa Time meter
US3210925A (en) * 1963-07-08 1965-10-12 Robert J Hepler Alarm stop watch
US3430434A (en) * 1966-06-14 1969-03-04 Lemania Lugrin Horlogerie Zero reset mechanism for timepieces measuring time intervals
US3543506A (en) * 1967-08-08 1970-12-01 Buren Watch Co Sa Self-winding wristwatch with a chronograph mechanism

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3045418A (en) * 1960-06-07 1962-07-24 Ed Heuer & Co Sa Time meter
US3210925A (en) * 1963-07-08 1965-10-12 Robert J Hepler Alarm stop watch
US3430434A (en) * 1966-06-14 1969-03-04 Lemania Lugrin Horlogerie Zero reset mechanism for timepieces measuring time intervals
US3543506A (en) * 1967-08-08 1970-12-01 Buren Watch Co Sa Self-winding wristwatch with a chronograph mechanism

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4100728A (en) * 1976-11-26 1978-07-18 Mattel, Inc. Mechanical digital stopwatch

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CH507553A (en) 1971-05-15
DE1953497A1 (en) 1970-06-11
DE1953497C3 (en) 1975-02-20
DE1953497B2 (en) 1974-07-04
CH1604868A4 (en) 1971-01-29

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7731416B2 (en) Time-setting member for a time indicator
JP4537655B2 (en) Bi-directional rotating chronograph
US6847589B2 (en) Watch including a case of elongated shape
GB1313631A (en) World timepiece
US9454133B2 (en) Timepiece calendar mechanism
US3696609A (en) Timepiece having oscillating rotation indicator
US6428201B1 (en) Chronograph timepiece and lever device for timepiece
US6406176B1 (en) Chronograph timepiece
US3911667A (en) Instantaneous feed mechanism for a day-date timepiece
US20040090872A1 (en) Timepiece component comprising a mechanism for interlocking a time indicating function and simultaneous winding of a barrel spring
US3543506A (en) Self-winding wristwatch with a chronograph mechanism
US3844107A (en) Timepiece
US3688491A (en) Timer
US20210325832A1 (en) Display device for a timepiece and timepiece comprising such a device
US3693344A (en) Timepiece movement
US3262259A (en) Time setting mechanism for electronic timepieces
US3559395A (en) Digital timepiece
US3691757A (en) Hand held timer-lap counter toy
US3323303A (en) Clockwork mechanism for short interval alarm timer
US3568432A (en) Chronograph-watch with independently mounted chronograph mechanism
US3645089A (en) Intermittent driving mechanism for timepiece
US3360922A (en) Electric watch calendar setting and detenting mechanism
US3683614A (en) Day calendar timepiece with multiple language displays
US3576100A (en) Date-watch
US20040208085A1 (en) Chronograph timepiece having calendar mechanism