Hardness Testing: Vickers, Rockwell, Brinell, and Microhardness Methods

Hardness is the resistance of a material to localised permanent deformation under an applied contact force. It is among the most widely performed mechanical tests in metals production and quality assurance, valued for its speed, minimal specimen preparation, and near-non-destructive character. This article provides a graduate-engineer-level treatment of all principal hardness methods — Vickers, Rockwell, Brinell, Knoop, and Leeb — covering their physical principles, indenter geometry, applicable load ranges, governing standards, hardness scale conversion per ASTM E140, and their specific roles in weld inspection, sour-service qualification, heat treatment control, and case depth measurement.

Key Takeaways

  • Hardness measures resistance to localised plastic deformation; it correlates with flow stress and, for steels, provides a reliable empirical estimate of tensile strength (UTS ≈ 3.45 × HBW for carbon and low-alloy steels).
  • Vickers (ISO 6507 / ASTM E92) uses a 136° square-pyramid diamond; HV is load-independent from HV5 to HV100 and is the preferred scale for weld hardness surveys and NACE compliance verification.
  • Rockwell C (ASTM E18, ISO 6508) uses a 120° diamond Brale indenter at 150 kgf total load; HRC is the production QC standard for heat-treated steels. Minimum specimen thickness ≈ 1.5 mm for typical tool-steel hardness.
  • Brinell HBW (ASTM E10, ISO 6506) with a 10 mm tungsten carbide ball at 3000 kgf is the standard for cast irons, forgings, and plate materials; the large impression averages over microstructural heterogeneity.
  • NACE MR0175/ISO 15156 limits carbon and low-alloy steel weld and HAZ hardness to 22 HRC = 248 HV10 = 237 HBW in H2S service.
  • Leeb portable hardness (ASTM A956) enables in-situ testing of large components; conversion to HRC/HB/HV is equipment-embedded but carries greater uncertainty than laboratory methods.

Hardness Conversion Calculator

Convert between HRC, HV, HBW, and approximate tensile strength for carbon and low-alloy steels (ASTM E140 Table 1). Valid range: HRC 20–68.

HRC range: 20 – 68
Rockwell C
HRC
Vickers
HV
Brinell
HBW
Tensile Strength
MPa (approx.)
Rockwell B
HRB
NACE Limit Status
22 HRC / 248 HV

⚠ Conversions are approximate per ASTM E140 Table 1 (carbon and low-alloy steels). Do not apply to aluminium alloys, cast irons, austenitic stainless steels, or non-ferrous metals without material-specific conversion data.

Hardness Indenter Geometry Comparison Vickers (HV) 136° Square impression measure diagonals d1, d2 HV = 1.854 F / d² Brinell (HBW) D = 10 mm d Circular impression measure diameter d HBW = 2F / (πD(D−√(D²−d²))) Rockwell (HRC) 120° h Measures depth h under additional load HRC = 100 − h/0.002 Knoop (HK) l : b ≈ 7 : 1 Elongated impression measure long diagonal l HK = 14.23 F / l² Load: 1–100 kgf ISO 6507 / ASTM E92 Load: 3000 kgf (steel) ISO 6506 / ASTM E10 Load: 10 kgf pre + 150 kgf ISO 6508 / ASTM E18 Load: 0.01–1 kgf ISO 4545 / ASTM E384
Indenter geometry, impression shape, and governing calculation formula for the four principal hardness methods: Vickers (square pyramid, 136°), Brinell (WC sphere, 10 mm), Rockwell C (conical diamond Brale, 120°), and Knoop (elongated rhombic pyramid). © metallurgyzone.com

The Physical Basis of Hardness

Hardness is not a fundamental material property in the thermodynamic sense — it is an engineering measure that depends on both the elastic and plastic response of the material under the specific indentation conditions of the chosen test. At the micro-scale, resistance to indentation is governed by dislocation density and mobility, grain boundary strengthening, solid-solution hardening, and precipitate strengthening. The martensite present in an as-quenched steel has the highest dislocation density and highest hardness of any ferrous microstructure; annealed ferritic steel has the lowest. Understanding which microstructural state is present — and whether it is appropriate for the application — is one reason hardness testing remains central to metallurgical QC.

For steels, the empirical correlation between Brinell hardness and tensile strength is one of the most practically useful relationships in materials engineering:

Tensile Strength from Brinell Hardness (Carbon and Low-Alloy Steels)
UTS (MPa)  ≈ 3.45 × HBW       [SI units]
UTS (psi)  ≈ 500  × HBW       [imperial]

Basis: ASTM A370, ASME Section II Part D Appendix 2
Valid range: 100 – 400 HBW (approximately 56 – 1380 MPa)
Accuracy: ± 7% for carbon and low-alloy steels in this range

Do NOT apply to:
  • Austenitic stainless steels
  • Aluminium alloys (separate empirical constants apply)
  • Cast irons (heterogeneous microstructure invalidates the relationship)
  • Cold-worked metals (work hardening raises HBW without proportional UTS increase)

Vickers Hardness Test (HV)

Principle and Indenter Geometry

The Vickers test, developed by Smith and Sandland at Vickers Ltd. in 1921, uses a square-based diamond pyramid with a 136° included face angle (the angle between opposite faces). The indenter is pressed into the polished test surface under a known load F for a dwell time of 10–15 seconds; the square impression left in the surface is measured optically using the two diagonals d1 and d2. The Vickers hardness number is the load divided by the contact area of the impression:

Vickers Hardness Formula
HV = (2F sin(136°/2)) / d²  ≈  1.8544 F / d²

Where:
  F  = applied test force, kgf  (N ÷ 9.807)
  d  = mean diagonal = (d₁ + d₂) / 2, mm

Example: F = 10 kgf (HV10), d = 0.320 mm
  HV = 1.8544 × 10 / 0.320² = 18.544 / 0.1024 = 181 HV10

Notation: HV[load][dwell time if not standard]
  e.g. 240 HV10 = Vickers 240 under 10 kgf, 15 s dwell (default omitted)

Load Range and Scale Designations

The Vickers test is uniquely versatile because the hardness value is theoretically independent of test force across the macro range (HV5 to HV100). This property — geometrical similarity of the impression — follows from the 136° pyramid geometry: as load increases, the impression scales proportionally and the ratio F/d² remains constant. In practice, deviations occur at very low loads where the indentation size effect (ISE) causes apparent hardness to increase as load decreases below approximately HV0.5, and at very high loads on inhomogeneous materials.

Designation Test Force (kgf / N) Typical Application Governing Standard
HV0.010.01 / 0.098Thin PVD coatings (<1 μm)ISO 6507-1, ASTM E384
HV0.025–HV0.10.025–0.1 / 0.25–0.98Individual phases, carburised layers, thin filmsISO 6507-1
HV0.2–HV10.2–1 / 1.96–9.81Microhardness traverse, case depth, HAZ profileISO 6507-1, ASTM E384
HV5, HV105–10 / 49–98Standard weld hardness surveys, NACE complianceISO 6507-1, ASTM E92, EN ISO 9015-1
HV30, HV50, HV10030–100 / 294–981Bulk hardness of heavy sections, forgingsISO 6507-1, ASTM E92
ASTM E92 and ISO 6507-1 define macro Vickers (HV1 and above); ASTM E384 and ISO 6507-1 define micro Vickers (below HV1).

Weld Hardness Surveys per EN ISO 9015-1

EN ISO 9015-1 prescribes the traverse pattern for Vickers weld hardness surveys: indents are placed in the weld metal, fusion line, HAZ, and base metal in a defined pattern. For butt welds in plate, the standard requires at least three rows of indents (top surface row, mid-thickness row, and root row). Indent spacing must be a minimum of three times the diagonal length from centre to centre and from any edge. HV5 or HV10 is specified; individual indent results are reported and the maximum value compared against the applicable acceptance criterion (typically 248 HV10 for NACE compliance or 350 HV for general weld quality). For further context on HAZ microstructure and why hardness limits matter, see the dedicated MetallurgyZone guide.

Rockwell Hardness Test (HR)

Principle: Differential Depth Measurement

The Rockwell test, invented by Stanley Rockwell and patented in 1919, differs fundamentally from Vickers and Brinell in that it measures the depth of penetration under load rather than the size of the residual impression. The test sequence has three stages:

  1. Pre-load (minor load): A preliminary load of 10 kgf (98 N) is applied, seating the indenter and establishing a reference depth, eliminating the effect of surface roughness. This reference position is set to zero.
  2. Major load application: The additional major load (140 kgf for HRC, giving 150 kgf total) is applied slowly and held for a dwell time of 2–6 seconds.
  3. Major load removed: The major load is removed; the pre-load remains. The permanent depth increase h (the increment from pre-load to final position after elastic recovery) is measured. The Rockwell number is calculated as a constant minus the penetration depth in units of 0.002 mm.
Rockwell Hardness C Scale Formula
HRC = 100 − (h / 0.002)

Where:
  h = additional permanent penetration depth beyond pre-load reference, mm
  Each Rockwell unit = 0.002 mm depth increment

Example: h = 0.100 mm permanent penetration
  HRC = 100 − (0.100 / 0.002) = 100 − 50 = 50 HRC

For HRB scale (ball indenter, minor load 10 kgf, major load 100 kgf total):
  HRB = 130 − (h / 0.002)

Rockwell Scales and Their Applications

Scale Indenter Total Load (kgf) Range Typical Application
HRCDiamond Brale 120°15020–70Heat-treated alloy steels, tool steels, hard castings
HRB1/16 in WC ball10035–100Soft steels, annealed steels, Cu alloys, Al alloys
HRADiamond Brale6060–88Cemented carbides, very hard thin coatings
HRDDiamond Brale10040–77Medium cemented carbides, thin hard materials
HR15NDiamond Brale15 (superficial)70–94Thin case-hardened layers, nitrided surfaces
HR30NDiamond Brale30 (superficial)42–86Sheet metal, thin cases
HR45NDiamond Brale45 (superficial)20–77Sheet metal where 30N is insufficient depth
HRF1/16 in ball6060–100Annealed copper alloys, thin soft sheet
Source: ASTM E18 Table 1 / ISO 6508-1 Table 1. WC = tungsten carbide; diamond ball indenters prohibited above 100 HRB (risk of diamond fracture).

HRC scale validity range: ASTM E18 specifies the valid range of HRC as 20–70 HRC. Results below 20 HRC should be reported on the HRB or Rockwell 15N scale; results above 70 HRC (very hard carbides, ceramics) are outside the calibrated range. The HRC scale is also invalid for thin specimens where the impression depth exceeds the substrate thickness limit (minimum approximately 10× the depth of penetration).

Brinell Hardness Test (HBW)

Principle and Geometry

The Brinell test, developed by Johan August Brinell and presented at the Paris World Exhibition in 1900, uses a hardened tungsten carbide (WC) ball pressed into the test surface under a known load. The Brinell Hardness Number (now designated HBW — H for hardness, B for Brinell, W for tungsten carbide ball) is the load divided by the curved surface area of the spherical impression:

Brinell Hardness Formula
HBW = (2F) / (πD(D − √(D² − d²)))

Where:
  F = applied test force, kgf
  D = ball diameter, mm (standard: 10 mm)
  d = mean impression diameter, mm  (average of two perpendicular measurements)

Note: Previous designation HBS (steel ball) is deprecated; all modern tests use WC ball.

Standard conditions for steel and cast iron:
  Ball: D = 10 mm WC
  Load: F = 3000 kgf (29.42 kN)  ⇒ Load/diameter ratio F/D² = 30
  Dwell: 10–15 s

Valid hardness range: 16–650 HBW10/3000
Practical upper limit: 450 HBW (above this, Vickers is preferred to avoid ball deformation)

Why Brinell for Forgings, Castings, and Plate

The large 10 mm ball produces a large impression (typically 2.5–6 mm diameter), which samples a significant volume of material and naturally averages over microstructural heterogeneity — grain clusters, pearlite colonies, graphite nodules in ductile iron, and inclusion stringers. This makes Brinell more representative than Vickers or Rockwell for coarse-grained materials, large forgings, and weld overlays where local microstructural variation is significant. Mill test certificates for structural plate (SA-516, SA-387), pressure vessel forgings (SA-105, SA-182), and pipe (API 5L) routinely report HBW values measured on the mill floor with portable Brinell testers. For context on iron-carbon phase diagram regions and how microstructure controls hardness, see the MetallurgyZone phase diagram guide.

Knoop Microhardness Test (HK)

Knoop hardness, developed at the National Bureau of Standards by Frederick Knoop in 1939, uses a diamond pyramid indenter with an elongated rhombic base: the long diagonal is approximately 7.11 times the short diagonal, giving an aspect ratio of approximately 7:1. The hardness is calculated from the long diagonal only:

Knoop Hardness Formula
HK = 14.229 F / l² Where: F = applied force, kgf; l = long diagonal, mm

The extremely shallow Knoop impression (depth ≈ l/30, compared to l/7 for Vickers) makes it ideal for:

  • Thin PVD/CVD coatings where Vickers indentation would crack or penetrate through the coating
  • Brittle materials (ceramics, cemented carbide phases, intermetallics) that crack under Vickers loads
  • Anisotropy measurement: the elongated impression responds differently to slip in directions parallel and perpendicular to the long axis, enabling detection of crystallographic anisotropy or fibre alignment in composites

Leeb Rebound Hardness Test (HL)

Leeb hardness (also called dynamic or portable hardness) uses a spring-propelled impact body that strikes the test surface and rebounds. The ratio of rebound velocity to impact velocity, measured by an electromagnetic coil surrounding the impact tube, gives the Leeb hardness value:

Leeb Hardness Definition
HL = (vR / vI) × 1000

Where:
  vR = rebound velocity of impact body, m/s
  vI = impact velocity of impact body, m/s
  HL = dimensionless (typically 300–900 for metals)

Device types (ISO 16859-1):
  D  — standard WC tip, most common
  DC — WC tip, compact device for confined access
  DL — WC tip, deep bore testing
  C  — WC tip, smaller mass, for lighter sections
  G  — WC tip, large mass, for rough cast surfaces
  S  — WC ball (spherical) tip, softer metals

Leeb values are converted to HRC, HBW, HV, or UTS using calibration curves embedded in the portable instrument. The conversions carry greater uncertainty than laboratory methods (typically ±3 HRC or ±15 HBW) because they depend on the material’s elastic modulus and acoustic impedance, which vary between alloy families. For in-situ testing of large pressure vessels, heat exchanger shells, and structural steelwork where laboratory testing is impractical, Leeb is the standard. ASTM A956/A956M and ISO 16859 govern testing and conversion procedures.

Shore Hardness (Scleroscope)

The Shore scleroscope (patented 1907) drops a diamond-tipped hammer of fixed mass from a fixed height onto the test surface and measures the rebound height. Shore hardness (HSc or HSd depending on hammer size) is expressed as 100 times the rebound height fraction of the drop height. The method is entirely non-marking on polished surfaces and was historically used for large rolls, bearing surfaces, and tool steel dies before Leeb instruments became widely available. It is now largely superseded by Leeb in industrial practice, though Shore D is still widely used for plastics and elastomers (ASTM D2240).

Hardness Scale Conversion and the ASTM E140 Tables

Converting between hardness scales is a routine requirement in metallurgical practice — a material certificate reports HBW but the acceptance criterion is specified in HRC, or a portable Leeb tester gives HL which must be compared against HV10. ASTM E140 (Standard Hardness Conversion Tables for Metals) provides the primary reference for carbon and low-alloy steels, austenitic stainless steels, nickel alloys, cartridge brass, and copper alloys. The following table reproduces the key reference points from ASTM E140 Table 1 (carbon and low-alloy steels), exactly as preserved from the original MetallurgyZone article data:

HRC HV (Vickers) HBW (10/3000) Approx. UTS (MPa) Typical Condition / Steel
689403090File-hard, as-quenched high-carbon steel
627462450As-quenched high-carbon steel (>0.6%C)
586336032080Case-hardened bearing steel
525124881680Hardened H13 / H11 tool steel
454324111420Austempered ductile iron; spring steel tempered
403813631250S690 Q+T structural steel; high-strength bolt
353363201100Bainitic / spring steel; 4340 Q+T
22248237820NACE MR0175 max for C&LA steel weld/HAZ
20238226783Lower practical limit of HRC scale
180170590Normalised SA-516 Gr.70 / A36 plate
140131455Annealed low-carbon steel
10095325Pure iron, fully annealed
Source: ASTM E140-12b Table 1. The highlighted row is the NACE MR0175/ISO 15156-2 acceptance limit for H₂S service. UTS = 3.45 × HBW (ASTM A370). Above ~450 HBW, Brinell is not reliable; Vickers or Rockwell should be used.

Critical limitation: ASTM E140 conversions apply only to the specified alloy/condition columns. Applying the carbon steel table to austenitic stainless steel, aluminium alloys, or titanium will give systematically incorrect results. Each alloy family has its own conversion table in ASTM E140.

Applications in Weld Inspection and Code Compliance

NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 Sour Service

The 22 HRC (248 HV10) hardness limit for carbon and low-alloy steel weld metal and HAZ in hydrogen sulphide service is one of the most cited code requirements in oil and gas fabrication. The physical basis is the sharp increase in hydrogen embrittlement susceptibility above approximately 250 HV, where untempered or high-dislocation-density martensite becomes susceptible to hydrogen-enhanced decohesion (HEDE) cracking at stress intensities well below KIC. Post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) is frequently required to temper hard HAZ martensite to below the limit. For a complete treatment of PWHT requirements and procedures, see the dedicated MetallurgyZone article.

ASME Section IX and Weld Procedure Qualification

While ASME Section IX does not mandate hardness limits as a test of weld procedure qualification in most cases, many purchaser specifications and supplementary requirements (such as API 2B, NACE compliance, or EPC specifications) add hardness testing to the PQR acceptance criteria. HV10 traverses per EN ISO 9015-1 across the full weld cross-section are reported on the PQR and must demonstrate compliant maximum hardness. Hardness results are also an essential audit finding during in-service inspection under API 510 and API 570 for equipment in sour or hydrogen service. For context on weld metallurgy, see the MetallurgyZone guide on hydrogen-induced cracking and HAZ microstructure.

Case Depth Measurement by Microhardness Traverse

The effective case depth (ECD) of carburised, carbonitrided, or nitrided components is measured by Vickers microhardness traverse. A polished cross-section perpendicular to the treated surface is prepared, and HV0.1 or HV0.3 indents are placed at intervals of 0.1–0.15 mm from the surface inward until hardness falls below the specified limit (typically 550 HV for case-hardened steel per ISO 2639; 400–450 HV for nitrided layers). The traverse produces a hardness-depth profile from which ECD is read. Surface hardness values above 750 HV indicate properly developed carburised martensite; values below 650 HV at the surface may indicate decarburisation, insufficient carbon potential, or inadequate quench. The relationship between hardness profile and microstructure is discussed in the MetallurgyZone article on quenching and tempering.

Surface Preparation, Spacing, and Test Validity Requirements

The validity of any hardness measurement depends critically on surface condition, indent spacing, section thickness, and operator technique. The principal requirements from ASTM E92 (Vickers), ASTM E18 (Rockwell), and ASTM E10 (Brinell) are:

  • Surface finish: For macro Vickers (HV5–HV100), a 320-grit or finer grinding finish is adequate. For micro Vickers below HV1, a metallographic polish (1 μm diamond or finer) is required to resolve impressions accurately.
  • Minimum thickness: The specimen must be thick enough that the deformation zone does not extend to the back face. Rules: Vickers — minimum thickness ≥ 10× diagonal; Rockwell C — minimum thickness ≥ 10× depth (approximately 1.5 mm for HRC 45–60); Brinell — minimum thickness ≥ 10× maximum impression depth (approximately 8× d/D).
  • Indent spacing: Vickers — centre-to-centre spacing ≥ 3× diagonal; edge distance ≥ 2.5× diagonal. Brinell — centre-to-centre ≥ 3× d; edge distance ≥ 2.5× d. Rockwell — centre-to-centre ≥ 3 mm.
  • Anvil and support: The specimen must be fully supported; any rocking will cause asymmetric impression and artificially low hardness. Curved surfaces require V-block supports or a curved anvil correction per ASTM E18 Appendix.
Hardness Scale Application Ranges — Steels and Selected Alloys HV (Vickers) HRC HBW HRB HK (Knoop) 0 HV 250 500 750 1000 HV NACE 248 HV Cemented carbide / ceramics >1000HV HRA scale As-quenched high-carbon steel Case-hardened bearing steel Q+T alloy / tool steel NACE limit: 22 HRC / 248 HV ◄ 248 HV / 22 HRC max Q+T structural steel (S690, 4140) Normalised / PWHT carbon steel Annealed / soft steel
Application ranges for principal hardness scales mapped to the Vickers HV scale for carbon and low-alloy steels. The red dashed line marks the NACE MR0175/ISO 15156 acceptance limit of 248 HV / 22 HRC for weld and HAZ in sour service. HRC is not valid below 20 HRC; HBW is not reliable above ~450 HBW. © metallurgyzone.com

Standards Quick Reference

Method ASTM Standard ISO Standard Calibration / Reference Blocks
Vickers (macro, HV1–HV100)ASTM E92ISO 6507-1/2/3ASTM E92 Annex; ISO 6507-3
Vickers / Knoop (micro, <HV1)ASTM E384ISO 6507-1, ISO 4545ASTM E384 Annex; certified micro-HV blocks
Rockwell (all scales)ASTM E18ISO 6508-1/2/3ASTM E18 Annex A2; ISO 6508-3
BrinellASTM E10ISO 6506-1/2/3ASTM E10 Annex; ISO 6506-3
Leeb (portable/dynamic)ASTM A956/A956MISO 16859-1/2/3ISO 16859-3; impact device calibration jig
KnoopASTM E384ISO 4545-1/2/3Shared with micro Vickers blocks
Hardness conversion tablesASTM E140ISO 18265N/A (tabulated data)
Weld hardness surveysAWS B4.0EN ISO 9015-1/2Per applicable Vickers standard above
All instruments must be verified using certified reference blocks traceable to national metrology institutes (NIST, NPL, PTB) at the frequency specified in the applicable standard.

Instrument Calibration and Traceability

All hardness testing machines must be calibrated using certified reference blocks traceable to national standards laboratories. ASTM E92, E18, E10, and E384 all specify direct verification (applying the test to a certified hardness reference block and checking that the result falls within a specified tolerance of the certified value) and indirect verification (calibration of the loading mechanism, measuring system, and indenter geometry). Direct verification is required daily before any production testing; indirect verification intervals are typically annual for fixed laboratory instruments and per-job for portable instruments in field service. Hardness reference blocks must be recertified periodically and must not be used on both faces (to prevent work-hardening from previous indentations affecting results).

The Knoop and Vickers hardness scales are related to SI units through the definition of HV and HK in terms of force (N) divided by impression area (mm²); Rockwell and Brinell are defined through their specific procedures and have no direct SI-unit form, though Brinell can be expressed in units of kgf/mm² numerically equal to the HBW number. The relationship between hardness and Charpy impact toughness is not straightforward — two steels at the same hardness can have very different toughness values depending on microstructure — but for a given steel and heat treatment condition, both hardness and toughness are governed by the same microstructural variables, making concurrent hardness and impact testing the standard approach in weld procedure qualification.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Vickers and Rockwell hardness?
Vickers (HV) uses a square-based diamond pyramid and measures the diagonal of the residual impression optically; the result is load-independent over the macro range. Rockwell measures the depth of penetration under a fixed additional load relative to a pre-load and gives a direct digital readout. Vickers is more versatile (applicable to thin coatings, case depths, and microstructural constituents) but slower. Rockwell is faster and requires no optical measurement, making it the standard for production QC of heat-treated steels.
What hardness limit applies to carbon steel welds in sour service?
NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156-2 requires a maximum hardness of 22 HRC (approximately 248 HV10 or 237 HBW) for carbon and low-alloy steel weld metal and HAZ in H2S service. This prevents hydrogen stress cracking in hard martensitic microstructures. Post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) is frequently required to achieve compliant hardness in steels with CEIIW above 0.42.
How is Brinell hardness converted to tensile strength?
For carbon and low-alloy steels, the approximate relationship is UTS (MPa) ≈ 3.45 × HBW (ASTM A370). This is reasonably accurate for the range 100–400 HBW but should not be applied to aluminium alloys, cast irons, or austenitic stainless steels without material-specific correction factors.
What load should be used for Vickers hardness testing of steel welds?
HV10 (98 N / 10 kgf) is the most common reference condition for weld hardness surveys and NACE compliance testing per EN ISO 9015-1. For case depth and microhardness profiling of thin layers, HV0.1 to HV1 are used. The indent must be spaced at least 3 diagonal lengths from any edge or previous indent.
Can Rockwell C scale be used on thin sheet metal?
No. Rockwell C uses a 150 kgf total load producing a deep impression. ASTM E18 requires a minimum thickness of approximately 1.5–2.0 mm for typical tool-steel hardness (HRC 40–60). For thin sheet, use Vickers (HV0.3–5) or Rockwell superficial scales (HR 15N, 30N, 45N at 15/30/45 kgf total load).
What is the Knoop hardness test used for?
Knoop (HK) uses an elongated rhombic diamond (7:1 long/short diagonal ratio) producing a very shallow impression. It is ideal for thin PVD/CVD coatings, brittle ceramics prone to cracking under Vickers loads, and for measuring anisotropy by rotating the indenter 90 degrees to reveal directional hardness differences in oriented microstructures.
How does the Leeb rebound hardness test work?
Leeb hardness (HL) measures the ratio of rebound velocity to impact velocity of a spring-propelled tungsten carbide tip: HL = (vR/vI) × 1000. The portable device converts HL to HRC, HBW, or HV using embedded calibration curves. It is the standard for in-situ testing of large pressure vessels and structural components in the field.
Why are hardness conversion tables approximate, not exact?
Different methods measure different aspects of plastic deformation: Vickers/Brinell measure impression area under static load; Rockwell measures depth; Leeb measures dynamic energy. The conversion depends on the elastic-plastic behaviour of the specific alloy and microstructure. ASTM E140 tables were derived empirically from specific steel grades; they are not valid for aluminium alloys, copper alloys, cast irons, or austenitic stainless without material-specific conversion data.
What is effective case depth and how is it measured?
Effective case depth (ECD) is the perpendicular distance from the surface to the point where hardness falls to a specified limit — typically 550 HV per ISO 2639 for carburised steels. A Vickers microhardness traverse (HV0.1–0.3, 0.1 mm spacing) is performed from the surface inward on a polished cross-section; the depth at the specified limit is the ECD.

Recommended Reference Books and Equipment

ASM Handbook Vol. 8: Mechanical Testing and Evaluation
The definitive reference for all mechanical test methods including all hardness scales, calibration requirements, specimen preparation, and conversion data.
View on Amazon
Portable Leeb Rebound Hardness Tester — Field Use
Portable hardness tester for in-situ field testing of pressure vessels, large forgings, and structural steelwork. Converts HL to HRC / HBW / HV on-screen.
View on Amazon
Vickers Microhardness Tester — Desktop HV
Desktop Vickers/Knoop microhardness tester for case depth measurement, weld HAZ traverses, and thin coating characterisation in laboratory settings.
View on Amazon
ASM Handbook Vol. 4D: Heat Treating of Irons and Steels
Covers hardness responses to all heat treatment cycles — quench-and-temper, carburising, nitriding — and the microstructural interpretation of hardness results.
View on Amazon

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