METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING A SPRUNG BALANCE OSCILLATOR FOR HIGH TORQUE VARIATION BALANCE SPRINGS

20250164930 ยท 2025-05-22

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A method for manufacturing an oscillator for a timepiece made from a balance and a balance spring, the method including measuring the average moment of inertia of a batch of balances; providing pinned up balance springs, the balance springs having an excess number of coils forming up to three more turns than the final number of coils; making a first predetermined external cut of the balance springs over a length of one to two coils, then measuring the torque of the balance springs and sorting them according to the value of the measured torque; assembling the balance springs, whose measured torque corresponds to the balances, are assembled to form an oscillator with an intermediate frequency and to determine the length to be cut to achieve the desired oscillation frequency; making a second external cut of the balance springs selected to achieve both the desired oscillation frequency and a target value.

Claims

1. A method for manufacturing an oscillator for a timepiece made from a balance and a balance spring, wherein the method comprises the following steps of: measuring the average moment of inertia of a batch of balances; providing pinned up balance springs, the balance springs having an excess number of coils forming up to three more turns than the final number of coils; making a first predetermined external cut of the balance springs with a defined excess of a length of one to two coils, then measuring the torque of the balance springs and sorting them according to the value of the measured torque; assembling the balance springs whose measured torque corresponds to the balances to form an oscillator with an intermediate frequency; making a second external cut of the balance springs selected to achieve both the desired oscillation frequency and a target value to obtain an attachment point angle () within +/50 of the theoretical value.

2. The manufacturing method according to claim 1, wherein the balance springs are made from a blank made of a metal or metal alloy.

3. The manufacturing method according to claim 2, wherein the blank is covered with a surface layer of a ductile material.

4. The manufacturing method according to claim 2, wherein the metal or metal alloy is selected from titanium, niobium, zirconium or a combination of these metals.

5. The manufacturing method according to claim 1, wherein the balance springs are shaped by a step of wire drawing and/or rolling the blank, alternating with at least one heat treatment step, with a step of winding in form the balance spring being carried out before the final heat treatment step.

6. The manufacturing method according to claim 3, wherein the ductile surface layer is removed after rolling, and before winding in.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

[0029] Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, which is given by way of example and is by no means limiting, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:

[0030] FIG. 1 shows a pinned up balance spring with an excess number of coils;

[0031] FIG. 2 shows a pinned up balance spring which has undergone a first external cut of one to two coils;

[0032] FIG. 3 diagrammatically shows an oscillator obtained using the manufacturing method according to the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0033] The invention relates to a method for manufacturing an oscillator 1 intended to equip a horological movement.

[0034] Manufacturing is understood in the broadest sense to mean the steps involved in manufacturing parts of the oscillator 1 and the steps involved in assembling parts of the oscillator 1.

[0035] During the first step, a batch of balances 2 is taken from a production run, the batch of balances 2 being obtained using a process that makes it possible to obtain a given inertia for the balances. The average inertia of the batch of balances 2 is measured to ensure that there is not too great a dispersion within the batch, and any balances with an inertia that is too far from this average are removed from the batch.

[0036] In the second step, pinned up balance springs 3 are supplied, which balance springs have an excess number of coils forming up to three additional coils, as shown in FIG. 1. Such an excess number of coils allows the balance springs to be shortened later as part of an adjustment operation.

[0037] These balance springs are made from a blank made of a metal or metal alloy.

[0038] A surface layer of a ductile material is then deposited on the alloy blank to facilitate shaping into wire form. This thickness of ductile material means that the blank can be easily stretched, drawn and rolled.

[0039] Finally, in order to shape the balance springs 3, the blank covered with the ductile surface layer is deformed by wire drawing and then rolling, then undergoes at least one heat treatment step, and finally a winding in step is carried out to form the balance springs 3.

[0040] A deformation step as a whole denotes one or more deformation treatments, which can comprise wire drawing and/or rolling. Wire drawing can require the use of one or more drawplates in the same deformation step or in different deformation steps if necessary. Wire drawing is carried out until a wire having a round cross-section is obtained. Rolling can be carried out during the same deformation step as wire drawing, or in another subsequent deformation step. Advantageously, the last deformation treatment applied to the alloy is a rolling operation, preferably having a rectangular profile that is compatible with the inlet cross-section for a winder spindle.

[0041] The addition of ductile material can be galvanic, by PVD or CVD, or mechanical; in this case, a sleeve or a tube of ductile material is obtained, which is adjusted on an alloy blank, which is then thinned out during the one or more steps of deforming the blank.

[0042] The ductile material is eliminated once all deformation treatment operations have been carried out, i.e. after the final rolling operation, and before the winding operation. The wire is, for example, stripped of its layer of ductile material by chemical etching, using an acid-based solution for example.

[0043] At the end of these steps, balance springs 3 with an excess external length of at least three coils, with an alloy core and a ductile shell are obtained.

[0044] The balance springs 3 obtained thus have a variable cross-section. This is because the wire forming the balance spring is not uniformly regular because the alloy is not as easily deformed as copper and as a result, the cross-section of the wire varies after the various deformation steps. There is thus a high degree of torque variability among the balance springs 3 produced and the Spiromatic system cannot be envisaged or used in such a case.

[0045] The method according to the invention comprises a third step in which a first external cut 30 is made to obtain a pre-cut balance spring 3, as shown in FIG. 2. The length of the outer cut 30 is made over one or two coils so that an excess length remains on the balance spring 3 to make a second subsequent cut when adjusting the balance spring 3 on the balance 2.

[0046] Then, in the fourth step, the torque of the balance springs 3 is measured, and the balance springs 3 are sorted according to the measured torque value to form batches of balance springs with a similar measured torque.

[0047] In the fifth step, the balance springs 3, whose measured torque corresponds to the inertia of the balances 2, are assembled to form an oscillator with an intermediate frequency and to determine the length to be cut to achieve the desired oscillation frequency.

[0048] Then, in the sixth step, a second external cut is made to the selected balance spring 3 to achieve both the desired oscillation frequency, and to achieve a target value for the angle formed by the point of attachment 6 of the balance spring 3 to a stud and the outlet 5 of the collet 4 after the second external cut, with a tolerance of plus or minus 50 of the theoretical value. The theoretical value is defined in such a way that the product requirements can be met once the curve has been formed.

[0049] Thus, such a method allows a batch of balance springs to be paired in such a way that all of the balance springs in the batch can be paired with the batch of balances within a tolerance of +/50.

[0050] The method of the invention thus provides a sprung balance assembly tuned to a particular frequency, with good reliability and accuracy.