skyeriding
901
Thank you jmpTT,
I'd like to, however my knowledge on cam-chronographs are more limited. From my understanding, typically they are two levels and are shaped as to control the levers like the column wheel. Except, the cam rocks back and forth via the push of the chrono button rather than a column-wheel that rotates in one direction only. An oscillating pinion would be similar to the intermediate wheel except as a tiny pillar with gears on both ends (analogous to the VC coaxial solution) and a two-layered wheel movement. I'll need to research this further on my own...
Horizontal clutch chronographs are indeed my favourite too; they can be constructed on the same plane and can be viewed in all its glory and motion unlike a vertical clutch tower which is usually concealed under bridges. As far as I know, VC and PP has a couple solutions for the coupling; as you said, the VC 3300 makes the intermediate gear a stack. This allows the running seconds gear and the intermediate to be coupled via standard cycloidal gearing, while the coupling between the chrono seconds gear and the intermediate to be using the finer teeth. I think the intermediate gear is made of a brass and a steel wheel - They are fused together via typical riveting at the centre as how other watch parts are joined together. Note that the top and bottom wheel does not have to be aligned perfectly, as there is no need for relative angular precision - the hands on the chronograph seconds and running seconds would be put last only after the movement is finished.
Patek uses the three-gear layout, but uses a special tooth profile as a compromise.
Regards,
skyeriding
This message has been edited by skyeriding on 2015-12-15 23:55:13