Engineering:Spring Drive
Spring Drive is a name given to a series of watch movements produced by Epson in Shiojiri. The concept of using a mainspring to power a quartz timing package was first conceived in 1977 by Yoshikazu Akahane (赤羽 好和) at Suwa Seikosha[1] (now a part of Epson after a 1985 merger).[2] Specified to one second accuracy per day,[3] the movement uses a conventional gear train as in traditional mechanical watches, but rather than an escapement and balance wheel, instead features Seiko's Tri-synchro Regulator system in which power delivery to the watch hands is regulated based on a reference quartz signal.[3]
Commercially released in 1999,[2] the movement is found in watches distributed by the Seiko Watch Corporation, including its Credor, Grand Seiko, Presage, and Prospex brands.
Mechanics
The Spring Drive uses a conventional mainspring[3] and barrel[4] along with automatic and/or stem winding to store energy, just as in a mechanical watch.[3] However, the escapement and balance wheel in mechanical watches is replaced by Seiko's Tri-synchro Regulator system, a phase-locked loop wherein a rotor, which Seiko refers to as a "glide wheel", is powered by the mainspring barrel via a stator. The glide wheel in turn powers a reference quartz crystal and accompanying integrated circuit which controls an electromagnetic brake which then regulates the rotational speed of the glide wheel itself.[3]
The glide wheel is intended to rotate eight times per second; the rotational speed is sampled once every rotation and a variable braking force is continuously applied to maintain that target frequency. As the glide wheel directly powers the seconds hand of the watch, this results in a true continuously sweeping second hand – in contrast to the beats per time motion resulting from the back-and-forth movement of traditional mechanical watches or the tick of typical quartz watches.[3]
The movement is specified to ±15 seconds per month.[5]
History
The design was first conceived by Yoshikazu Akahane at Suwa Seikosha in 1977[1] and patents were applied for it in 1982;[5] in total, no fewer than 230 patents have been applied worldwide for this movement.[6] Initial development was hindered by the high energy consumption of the reference quartz crystal and integrated circuit[5] making a watch with a then-target 48-hour power reserve impossible;[7] another attempt in 1993 was also unsuccessful for the same reason.[5] It was not until a third attempt in 1997, using a quartz crystal and integrated circuit with energy consumption approximately one one-hundredth that used in the initial attempt in 1982,[7] that a Spring Drive watch with sufficient power reserve was deemed feasible.[5] Over 600 prototypes were produced during development.[1][3][8]
The Spring Drive movement was announced publicly in 1997 and presented at the 1998 Basel Watch Fair.[1][8] In 1999, the first production models were made available in Japan as limited edition, manual-wind watches in both the Credor and Seiko brands.[2][5][8] The first non-limited model was released in Japan in 2002.[5]
The 1st spring drive automatic-wind movement of Grand Seiko was released in September 2004, the reference number is SBGA001.[citation needed]
The first automatic-wind Spring Drive model was released in 2005,[8] and coincided with the introduction of the Spring Drive movement to markets outside of Japan.[8]
Calibers
Early models, manual wind and 48h power reserve:
- 7R68 : 30 jewels, date.
- 7R78 : 30 jewels, date.
- 7R88 : 30 jewels, date.
- 7R99 : 32 jewels.
Current calibers with standard features. Time accuracy: monthly rate within ±15 sec (equivalent to a daily rate of ±1 sec) and power reserve (72h) indicator.
- 5R64 : 32 jewels, date, small seconds hand.
- 5R65 : 30 jewels, date.
- 5R66 : 30 jewels, date, GMT.
- 5R67 : 30 jewels, Moon Phase indicator.
- 5R77 : 30 jewels, Moon Phase indicator.
- 5R85 : 49 jewels, date, Chronograph, Izul.
- 5R86 : 50 jewels, date, GMT, Chronograph, Spacewalk.
- 7R06 : 88 jewels, manual winding, Sonnerie.
- 7R08 : 44 jewels, manual winding, Eichi I.
- 7R11 : 112 jewels, manual winding, Minute Repeater.
- 7R14 : 41 jewels, manual winding, Eichi II.
- 9R01 : 56 jewels, manual winding. Power reserve 8 days (192h).
- 9R15 : 30 jewels, date. Monthly rate within ±10 sec (±0.5 sec per day).
- 9R31 : 30 jewels, manual wind
- 9R65 : 30 jewels, date.
- 9R66 : 30 jewels, date, GMT.
- 9R84 : 41 jewels, date, Chronograph.
- 9R86 : 50 jewels, date, GMT, Chronograph.
- 9R96 : 50 jewels, date, GMT, Chronograph.
Current calibers with higher power reserve and higher accuracy. Time accuracy: monthly rate within ±10 sec (equivalent to a daily rate of ±0.5 sec) and power reserve (5 days) indicator.
- 9RA5 : 38 jewels, date.
- 9RA2 : 38 jewels, date. Rear power reserve indicator.
Notes and references
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Time passes beautifully on elegant, high-quality watch". The Japan Times. 26 March 2018. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2018/03/26/business/time-passes-beautifully-elegant-high-quality-watch/.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Seiko/Credor Spring Drive", Milestone Products, Seiko Epson, http://global.epson.com/company/corporate_history/milestone_products/35_spring_drive.html
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 "spring drive movement about". Grand Seiko. https://www.grand-seiko.com/us-en/about/movement/springdrive.
- ↑ "HISTORY - ABOUT - Grand Seiko". Grand Seiko. https://www.grand-seiko.com/us-en/about/history.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 "Seiko/ Credor Spring Drive". Seiko Epson. December 1999. https://global.epson.com/company/corporate_history/milestone_products/pdf/35_spring-drive.pdf.
- ↑ "Seiko launches limited edition watches". India Today. 2 February 2012. https://www.indiatoday.in/business/story/seiko-launches-limited-edition-watches-91692-2012-02-02.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Bredan, David (5 February 2017). "The Amazing History & Functionality Of The Seiko Spring Drive Movement". https://www.ablogtowatch.com/history-seiko-spring-drive-movement/.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 "Seiko Spring Drive The Quiet Revolution". Seiko Watch Corporation. http://www.seikospringdrive.com/brochure/pdf/all.pdf.
de:Seiko#Spring Drive
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring Drive.
Read more |