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[0002] It is common practice to produce eyes which close spontaneously when the doll is laid down, and which open when the doll is stood up, owing to the effect of a counterweight which orients an ocular globe suspended by its horizontal axis.
[0003] According to the invention, the opening and the closing of the eye is controlled by an electric current delivered by an autonomous electronic unit incorporated into the doll.
[0004] It is common practice to produce eyes driven by an electric motor; however, the noise of the motor reduces the attraction of this function, which claims to be discreet and natural, the complexity of the mechanism results in an excessively high cost together with difficulties of incorporating it into the doll's head and ocular globe, and finally the search for a lower electrical consumption is pleading for an economic principal.
[0005] According to the invention, the principle governing the animation of a rotating ocular globe
[0006] is silent,
[0007] dissipates only a small electric current, and only for the opening and closing phases,
[0008] the eyes remain open or closed, depending on the state, in the absence of electrical supply and
[0009] the control mechanism is housed in a cavity to the rear of the ocular globe, and is both discreet and accessible for conventional mounting via the doll's visible face.
[0010] Document U.S. Pat. No. 3,492,760 relates to a ocular globe driven by an electromagnet opposite to a biasing force. It therefore consumes a permanent current for maintaining it open.
[0011] According to the invention, the ocular globe of the doll or teddy bear is driven not by a motor but by an electromagnet whose moving part—the ocular globe—rotates by a quarter of a turn, in both directions, about a horizontal axis.
[0012] According to the invention, the rotating ocular globe includes at least one magnet and this ocular globe is incorporated into a support which guides its rotation with an amplitude of about a quarter of a turn.
[0013] The support is intended to be incorporated into the teddy bear's or doll's orbit.
[0014] The support includes at least one coil and at least one ferromagnetic core which, owing to the effect of a pulsed electric current, generates a magnetic field which orients said magnet.
[0015] Two electrical wires leave the support and are intended to be connected to the control electronics.
[0016] According to a first nonexclusive embodiment of the invention, which is optimized for its effectiveness and its simplicity, the magnet is a cylindrical disk, incorporated into the ocular globe, having an axis common to the rotation axis of the globe.
[0017] The magnet has a particular magnetic polarization in the plane of the disk, with two north poles and two south poles, the two north poles being diametrically opposed, the two south poles being diametrically opposed and the norths and souths alternating at 90° to one another.
[0018] The electromagnet consists of a horseshoe-shaped core made of hard iron, surrounded by a coil and lying in the plane of the disk, behind the ocular globe.
[0019]
[0020] A magnetized disk
[0021] A core
[0022] The limit stops
[0023] According to the invention, the when there is not any current and field generated by the coil
[0024] Since the field closes up in the core, the magnet exerts a stabilizing return torque at the ends.
[0025] A pulsed current in the coil
[0026] The new stable position then corresponds to the eye appearing closed.
[0027] The duration of the pulse and the energy deployed corresponds to the rotation time of the globe and to its inertia.
[0028] The direction of the current is determined so that the field induced by
[0029] Many alternative embodiments are conceivable:
[0030] The magnet
[0031] The core or the coils may be oriented differently.
[0032] The ocular globe will be made of plastic, assembled or injection-molded, of glass or of ceramic and the casing
[0033] According to another embodiment of the invention, the ocular globe includes two magnets and two coils, the eye rotates through an angle close to 90°, owing to the effect of a current pulse in the two said coils, and each angular position is stable with no electric current, owing to the effect of the static magnetic attraction of said magnets.
[0034]
[0035] The equilibrium positions, which are also mechanical limit stop positions, are formed by the contact of the magnet on the ferromagnetic core, this being a stable sticking position held by static ferromagnetic attraction and exclusively broken by a current pulse generating an opposing magnetic field.