25 March 2026· 15 min read· Calculator ASTM E140 Hardness Testing

Hardness Converter — HV, HRC, HRB, HBW, HRA, Knoop, UTS (ASTM E140 / ISO 18265)

Hardness conversion is one of the most frequent tasks in metals engineering: material specifications are written on one scale, the testing equipment works on another, and code limits are expressed on a third. This converter implements ASTM E140-12b lookup-table interpolation for wrought carbon and alloy steels, converting between nine scales simultaneously — Vickers (HV), Rockwell C (HRC), Rockwell B (HRB), Rockwell A (HRA), Brinell (HBW), superficial 15-N (HR15N), superficial 30-N (HR30N), Knoop (HK), and approximate tensile strength (UTS in MPa and ksi). NACE MR0175 sour-service compliance is indicated automatically. A batch conversion table accepts up to twelve values for side-by-side comparison.

Key Takeaways

  • All hardness conversions are empirical, not analytical. ASTM E140 provides the reference tables; polynomial interpolation adds ±2–5% error at scale extremes. Always measure on the specified scale for critical acceptance testing.
  • HRC is valid from 20–68 HRC only. Below 20 HRC use HRB or Brinell; above 68 HRC use HV or Knoop microhardness.
  • NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 sour-service limit: 22 HRC = 250 HV = 237 HBW for carbon and low-alloy steels. HAZ hardness verification requires Vickers testing (HV10 or HV5) per ISO 15614-1 or API 1104.
  • UTS ≈ 3.3 × HV (MPa) applies to wrought carbon and alloy steels in quenched-and-tempered or normalised condition. Do not use for austenitic stainless, non-ferrous alloys, or cold-worked material.
  • For case-hardened surfaces (carburised, nitrided, induction hardened), use Vickers microhardness (HV0.1–HV1) for surface hardness and case depth profiling. HRC measures a depth-averaged value and underestimates surface hardness of thin cases.
  • ISO 18265:2013 is the equivalent international standard to ASTM E140. Both provide separate tables for steel, austenitic stainless, nickel alloys, brass, and aluminium alloys.

Multi-Scale Hardness Converter

9 scales • ASTM E140 lookup interpolation • NACE compliance • UTS • batch mode

Single Conversion
Batch Mode
ASTM E140 Table 1 is most common. Select Table 2 for 304/316/310 etc.
Please enter a valid value in the selected scale range.
Hardness Indenter Geometries Vickers (HV) d (diagonal) 136° HV=1.854×F/d² F=test force (kgf) d=diagonal (mm) Rockwell C (HRC) h 120° cone HRC=100−h/0.002 h=depth diff. (mm) F=150 kgf major Brinell (HBW) D=10mm WC ball d (diameter) HBW=2F/(πD(D−√(D²−d²))) F=3000 kgf (steel) Knoop (HK) L (long diag.) 7.11:1 ratio HK=14.229×F/L² Brittle / thin films Key Differences Between Scales HV: Measures diagonal → area → independent of load* HRC: Measures depth difference → no optical needed HBW: Large ball → bulk average; needs low hardness HK: Long indent → brittle materials & thin coatings *Geometrically similar indents → HV constant across loads (ISE affects microhardness) Hardness Scale Valid Ranges 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 68 ~HRC equivalent (for scale positioning) HV 80 — 1,000+ HV (unlimited scale) HRC 20 — 68 HRC HRB 0 — 100 HRB HRA 60 — 88 HRA HBW 100 — 650 HBW (<47 HRC) HR15N 69 — 94 HR15N HR30N 41 — 86 HR30N Knoop HK 100 — 1,000+ HK (microhardness) NACE limit 22 HRC 250 HV Scale Selection Guide HV: Universal — case profiles, HAZ, coatings, R&D HRC: Hardened steels, tools, production QC HRB: Soft metals — copper, aluminium, annealed steel HBW: Castings, weld pads, coarse microstructures HRA: Cemented carbide, hard coatings, thin sections HR15N/30N: Thin case (carburised, nitrided) surfaces HK: Ceramics, glasses, thin films, brittle materials
Figure 1. Left: cross-sectional geometry of the four main hardness indenters with hardness formulas. Vickers and Knoop measure indent area/diagonal optically; Rockwell measures penetration depth directly (no microscope needed). Right: valid operating range of each hardness scale, positioned on an approximate HRC-equivalent axis. The NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 22 HRC = 250 HV limit is marked. Select the scale appropriate to the material hardness and application — using HRC below 20 or Brinell above 450 HBW gives unreliable results. © metallurgyzone.com

Physical Basis of Indentation Hardness

Hardness is defined as resistance to permanent (plastic) deformation under a concentrated load. All indentation hardness tests share the same underlying physics: a hard indenter is pressed into the material surface under a known force, creating a plastically deformed impression whose size or depth is proportional to the material’s flow resistance. The differences between scales lie in indenter geometry, load magnitude, and whether area (Vickers, Brinell, Knoop) or depth (Rockwell) is measured.

Tabor’s Constraint Factor and the HV–UTS Relationship

The physical link between hardness and yield/tensile strength comes from Tabor’s constraint factor C (Tabor, The Hardness of Metals, 1951). For a Vickers indenter, the mean pressure under the indent pm relates to the material’s representative flow stress σr (at ~8% representative strain) by:

p𝑚 = C × σ𝕣 ≈ 3.0–3.3 × σₑ  (for most structural metals)

Since HV = F/A = p𝑚 × (constant) and σₑ ≈ UTS for strain-hardening metals:

  UTS (MPa) ≈ 3.3 × HV  (Vickers, kgf/mm²; for carbon/alloy steels)
             ≈ 3.0 × HV  (more conservative, for high-strength Q&T steels)
  UTS (MPa) ≈ 3.45 × HBW (Brinell, 10mm ball, 3000 kgf load)
  UTS (MPa) ≈ 450 × HRC  (very rough, valid ~25–50 HRC only)

HV = 0.1891 × F (N) / d² (mm²)   [SI form]
   = 1.854 × F (kgf) / d² (mm²)  [traditional form]

The HV–UTS relationship holds well for wrought steels in the annealed, normalised, and Q&T condition. It fails for: cold-worked materials (hardness increases disproportionately relative to UTS because of work hardening); austenitic stainless steels (lower constraint factor due to different strain hardening exponent); cast structures (porosity and phase heterogeneity); and non-ferrous alloys. ISO 18265 Annex B provides alloy-specific HV-to-UTS conversion tables for several material categories.

The Rockwell Scales: Principle and Valid Ranges

The Rockwell test measures the net depth of penetration of the indenter under the major load relative to the depth under the preliminary minor load (10 kgf for regular Rockwell, 3 kgf for superficial Rockwell). The hardness number is a dimensionless unit calculated from the depth difference, with higher numbers indicating harder material. This depth-measurement approach makes the Rockwell test fast and suitable for production-line testing without optical measurement.

HRC = 100 − h / 0.002    (Brale diamond indenter, 150 kgf major load)
HRB = 130 − h / 0.002    (1/16” steel ball, 100 kgf major load)
HRA = 100 − h / 0.002    (Brale diamond, 60 kgf major load)

where h = net depth of indentation [mm] = depth under major load − depth under minor load

Superficial (HR_N) scales:
  HR15N: Brale indenter, 15 kgf major → valid for thin hardened cases
  HR30N: Brale indenter, 30 kgf major → medium case depths
  HR45N: Brale indenter, 45 kgf major → deeper case depths

Scale selection by material hardness range:
  HRB: 0–100 HRB (≈ 80–237 HV); soft to medium hardness
  HRC: 20–68 HRC (≈ 228–940 HV); hardened steel range
  HRA: 60–88 HRA; cemented carbide, hardened thin sections
  HR15N: 69–94 HR15N; shallow case depth (case >0.5 mm)
  HR30N: 41–86 HR30N; medium case depth (>0.75 mm)

ASTM E140 Conversion Tables: What They Are and Their Limitations

ASTM E140 hardness conversion tables were constructed empirically by testing the same specimens on multiple machines to different scales and fitting polynomials to the resulting paired data. Key points:

  • Material specificity: ASTM E140 provides five separate tables. Table 1 (non-austenitic steels) is by far the most commonly used and is what this calculator implements. Using Table 1 for austenitic stainless steel introduces systematic errors of 5–10 HRC. Always verify which table applies to the material being tested.
  • Microstructure dependence: Two steels at identical HRC may differ by ±15–25 HV if they have different microstructures (tempered martensite vs bainite vs pearlite), because hardness measures average resistance to plastic deformation across the indent area, which depends on microstructural uniformity and phase distribution.
  • Statistical nature: Each table entry represents the mean of a dataset with scatter. ASTM E140 explicitly states that conversions accurate to ±1 HRC or ±10 HV are not always achievable, and that for critical quality assurance, measurement on the specified scale is mandatory.
  • Range validity: Converting HV 85 to HRC (which would be approximately 0 HRC) is meaningless. Always confirm the target scale value falls within the valid range before reporting.
Do not use conversions for acceptance testing. When a material specification (purchase order, weld procedure, or standard such as NACE MR0175) specifies hardness on a particular scale (e.g., HV10), measure on that scale and report that value. Conversions introduce additional uncertainty and may be explicitly prohibited by the governing code. Use conversions only for orientation, cross-checking, or equipment-based necessity.

ASTM E140 Hardness Conversion Reference Table (Non-Austenitic Steels, Table 1)

HRC HV HBW (10/3000) HRA HR15N HR30N HK UTS est. (MPa) Condition / Application
6894085.693.284.49203,100File-hard; max HRC for steel
6583283.992.382.48122,745As-quenched high-C tool steel
6274671082.591.280.27222,460As-quenched 0.6%C steel
5863360380.189.877.56122,090Case hardened bearing steel
5556053478.588.675.45421,850Tempered spring / die steel
5251248877.087.473.44921,690Hardened H13 tool steel
4845142975.185.870.64321,490Hardened / tempered spring
4542140173.985.068.94021,390Austempered ductile iron (ADI)
4239037172.683.967.03721,290Q&T alloy steel; 4140 @ 480°C
4037035271.883.365.73521,220Q&T S690 structural steel
3835033371.082.564.33321,1554140 @ 540°C; S620 Q&T
3532030569.881.362.13031,056Hardened spring steel 550°C
3028627268.179.659.2272944NACE limit region (22 HRC = 250 HV)
22250237238825NACE MR0175 max for sour service
2526224865.777.455.1249865Normalised 4140; annealed tool steel
20238226226785Lower HRC limit; use HRB below
Data from ASTM E140-12b Table 1 (non-austenitic steels). HBW values at 10 mm ball, 3,000 kgf load. UTS estimated as 3.3 × HV for carbon and alloy steels in wrought condition. Red rows indicate NACE MR0175 sour-service limit zone. — = scale not valid or not tabulated at this hardness. ISO 18265:2013 provides equivalent data for the international system.
Weld HAZ Hardness Traverse (HV10) 100 200 300 400 500 HV10 Distance from weld CL (mm) 0 5 10 15 20 250 HV NACE limit Weld metal CGHAZ FGHAZ ICHAZ Parent metal ~350 HV (exceeds NACE) ~280 HV ~220 HV Per ISO 15614-1 / API 1104 / NACE MR0175 — max 250 HV10 UTS vs HV — Carbon & Alloy Steels 0 600 1200 1800 2400 UTS (MPa) 0 200 400 600 800 1000 Vickers Hardness HV UTS=3.3HV +15% −15% UTS ≈ 3.3×HV (carbon & alloy steel) NOT valid for SS, Al, Cu, cast structures
Figure 2. Left: schematic Vickers HV10 hardness traverse across a single-pass weld cross-section. The coarse-grained HAZ (CGHAZ) shows a hardness peak (~350 HV) that exceeds the NACE MR0175 limit of 250 HV — a common finding in carbon steel welds without preheat or post-weld heat treatment. Right: UTS versus HV scatter plot for carbon and alloy steels, showing the mean line UTS = 3.3 × HV and the ±15% scatter band arising from different microstructures (tempered martensite, bainite, pearlite) at the same HV. © metallurgyzone.com

NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 Hardness Requirements

NACE MR0175 (now harmonised with ISO 15156) is the definitive standard governing materials selection for components exposed to H₂S-containing (sour) environments in oil and gas production. Sulphide stress cracking (SSC) is a hydrogen embrittlement mechanism that causes brittle fracture of high-strength steel at stresses well below the yield strength. Hardness is the primary screening criterion because SSC susceptibility correlates strongly with martensite hardness — harder martensite is more susceptible to hydrogen trapping and embrittlement.

Hardness Limits per NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156-2

Material Zone Max hardness (HRC) Max hardness (HV) Max hardness (HBW) Test method Notes
C/low-alloy steel (body)22250237HRC or HBW per ASTM E18/E10Primary SSC limit
Weld metal and HAZ250HV10 or HV5 per ASTM E92Vickers mandatory for HAZ traverse
Martensitic SS (13Cr)23255HRC per ASTM E18Per ISO 15156-3 Table A.1
Duplex SS (22Cr, 25Cr)310HV10 per ASTM E92Higher limit allowed for duplex structure
Austenitic SS (304, 316)No limit (inherently resistant to SSC)Austenitic SS is SSC-immune at standard composition
NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156-2:2020. The 22 HRC / 250 HV limit applies to the bulk metal AND all weld zones (weld metal, CGHAZ, FGHAZ, ICHAZ). A single HAZ measurement exceeding 250 HV10 constitutes non-compliance. PWHT (post-weld heat treatment) at 620–680°C is the standard remediation to temper hard martensite in carbon steel HAZ. See the HAZ microstructure guide for complete HAZ thermal cycle and microstructure analysis.

Vickers Microhardness for Case Depth Profiling

For case-hardened surfaces (carburised, nitrided, induction hardened, borided), the surface and subsurface hardness distribution must be measured by Vickers microhardness (HV0.1, HV0.3, or HV1 load) at a series of positions from the surface into the core. The effective case depth (ECD) is defined as the depth at which hardness drops below a specified threshold — typically 550 HV (≈52 HRC) for carburised gears (ISO 6336-5) or 515 HV for induction hardened shafts.

Case depth rules (ISO 6336-5, AGMA 2101):
  ECD (carburising): depth to 550 HV (≈ 52 HRC)
  CHD (carburising): depth to 550 HV using HV1 per ASTM E18
  NHD (nitriding):   depth to 650 HV (≈ 58 HRC)
  SHD (induction):   depth to 550 HV (≈ 52 HRC)

Minimum indent spacing for HV microhardness traverse:
  HV0.1 (10 gf):  spacing ≥ 3× indent diagonal ≈ 15–25 μm → 50 μm min.
  HV1   (100 gf): spacing ≥ 3× indent diagonal ≈ 45–80 μm → 150 μm min.

Rockwell HRC is NOT appropriate for case depth measurement:
  HRC indentation depth ≈ 1.5 mm → averages case + transition + core
  Use HV0.3 or HV1 traverse for case profiles (per ISO 2639, ASTM E1936)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the relationship between HV and HRC?
HV and HRC are empirically related through ASTM E140 conversion tables — there is no exact analytical formula between them because they measure different physical quantities (indent area vs penetration depth). Approximate polynomial fits exist, but ASTM E140 table interpolation (as implemented in this calculator) gives better accuracy: ±1–2 HRC or ±10–20 HV for wrought carbon and alloy steels. The relationship varies with microstructure — two steels at identical HRC may differ by ±15–25 HV if their microstructures differ (tempered martensite vs bainite). For critical acceptance testing, always measure on the scale specified in the relevant standard. See the hardness testing methods guide for detailed test procedure and equipment calibration requirements.
What ASTM E140 hardness conversion table applies to my material?
ASTM E140 provides five separate tables: Table 1 for non-austenitic steels (carbon, low-alloy, martensitic stainless — the most commonly used); Table 2 for austenitic stainless steels (304, 316L, 310S); Table 3 for nickel and high-nickel alloys; Table 4 for cartridge brass; Table 5 for aluminium alloys. Using the wrong table introduces systematic errors of 5–10 HRC. This calculator implements Table 1. ISO 18265:2013 provides equivalent tables for the international system. For austenitic stainless steels, the HV-to-UTS relationship also differs — the UTS ≈ 3.3×HV formula does not apply to austenitic grades because of their different strain hardening behaviour. See the austenitic stainless steel guide for property data.
Why can’t HRC be measured below 20 HRC and above 68 HRC?
Below 20 HRC, the Brale diamond indenter penetrates so deeply that the hemispherical tip meets the material, altering the depth measurement and making HRC unreliable. For softer materials, use HRB (steel ball, 100 kgf, valid 0–100 HRB) or Brinell. Above 68 HRC, the material is harder than the Brale indenter can accurately measure — results become unreliable and there is risk of indenter damage. Very hard cemented carbides and ceramic coatings require a different scale (HRA, HV, or Knoop). Vickers hardness HV has no upper limit and can measure the full range from very soft to very hard (80 HV annealed aluminium to 1,500+ HV cemented carbide) simply by selecting an appropriate test load. This is why HV is universally used for weld HAZ testing where the range from ~200 HV (parent metal) to 400+ HV (hard martensite) must be covered without changing scale.
What is the NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 maximum hardness limit?
NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 specifies 22 HRC = 250 HV = 237 HBW as the maximum hardness for carbon and low-alloy steels in H₂S-containing (sour) service, to prevent sulphide stress cracking. For weld metal and HAZ, 250 HV10 (Vickers, HV10 load) is the limit — Vickers is mandatory for HAZ traverse testing because it allows measurement at specific locations within the narrow HAZ zone. A single HAZ reading above 250 HV10 constitutes non-compliance and typically requires post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) at 620–680°C to temper hard martensite. This limit is the single most common reason for weld procedure qualification failure in oil and gas pipeline construction. See the HAZ microstructure guide for the metallurgical basis of HAZ hardness and its control.
How accurate are hardness conversions between HV and HRC?
ASTM E140 table-based conversions for wrought carbon and alloy steels have an inherent accuracy of approximately ±1–2 HRC or ±10–20 HV. This scatter arises because different steel microstructures (martensite, bainite, ferrite-pearlite) at identical hardness on one scale have different values on another scale. Polynomial curve fits to the tables add further error of up to ±3–5 HRC at the scale extremes. ISO 18265:2013 Annex A quantifies the measurement uncertainty of conversions for each scale pair. The bottom line: for quality control decisions (accepting or rejecting material), always measure on the scale specified in the standard and report that measurement — never convert and report the conversion. Conversions are for cross-referencing and orientation only. The hardness testing methods guide covers calibration, repeatability, and measurement uncertainty in detail.
What is the relationship between Vickers hardness and tensile strength?
For wrought carbon and alloy steels: UTS (MPa) ≈ 3.3 × HV (Tabor’s constraint factor relationship). This gives: HV 200 → 660 MPa; HV 300 → 990 MPa; HV 400 → 1,320 MPa. The coefficient 3.3 is empirical and valid for the annealed, normalised, and Q&T condition. For Q&T steels at higher hardness, coefficients of 3.0–3.2 are more accurate. ISO 18265 Annex B provides alloy-specific HV-to-UTS tables. The relationship fails for: austenitic stainless steels (lower constraint factor), cold-worked material (hardness disproportionately raised), cast structures, and non-ferrous alloys. The Brinell-to-UTS correlation (UTS ≈ 3.45 × HBW) is also commonly used in structural steel applications. The quenching and tempering guide includes tempering temperature vs hardness and UTS data for 4140 and other alloy steels.
What is the difference between HRB and HRC scales?
HRB uses a 1/16-inch steel ball indenter at 100 kgf major load — valid from 0–100 HRB for soft materials (annealed steels, copper, aluminium, soft brass, soft cast iron). HRC uses the Brale diamond cone at 150 kgf — valid from 20–68 HRC for hardened steels, tool steels, and through-hardened components. The two scales overlap only around the 100 HRB / 20 HRC transition point (approximately 225–240 HV). Materials in this transition zone should ideally be measured on HV which spans the full range without scale change. Converting between HRB and HRC across the full range is unreliable because the indenter geometry and load differ fundamentally. Vickers hardness (HV) is recommended whenever the material may fall in the transition zone or when a single scale must cover a wide hardness range.
Why is Vickers hardness preferred for weld HAZ testing?
Vickers hardness is preferred for HAZ testing because: (1) Small indent size — at HV1 or HV5 load, the indent is only 50–200 μm across, allowing measurement at specific positions within a 1–3 mm wide HAZ that a Brinell or Rockwell indent would span entirely; (2) Continuous scale — HV covers soft parent metal (180–250 HV) to hard martensite (350–600 HV) without changing indenter or load; (3) Code compliance — all major welding codes (ISO 15614-1, API 1104, AWS D1.1) and NACE MR0175 specify Vickers HV10 or HV5 for HAZ hardness surveys. ASTM E92 governs the Vickers test procedure, and ASTM E384 covers microhardness at loads below 1 kgf. A typical HAZ traverse tests 3–5 positions across each zone (weld metal, CGHAZ, FGHAZ, ICHAZ, parent metal) at each thickness location on the section. See the HAZ microstructure guide for the zones and their metallurgical significance.
What is the Knoop hardness test and when is it used?
Knoop hardness (HK) uses an elongated rhombic-based diamond indenter (length-to-width ratio 7.11:1) at loads from 1–200 gf. The long, shallow indent makes Knoop ideal for: (1) brittle materials (ceramics, glass) where a deep Vickers indent would cause radial cracking; (2) thin coatings and surface layers where the indent must not exceed ~10% of the layer thickness to avoid substrate influence — the Knoop indent is much shallower than Vickers at the same long-diagonal dimension; (3) anisotropy studies across grain boundaries or in individual phases (ferrite, martensite, retained austenite); (4) highly oriented materials where indent geometry affects the measurement differently in different directions. ASTM E384 covers both Vickers and Knoop microhardness testing. HK values are approximately comparable to HV in the overlapping range but the scales diverge significantly outside 300–800 HK/HV. The conversion calculator above provides approximate HK values from HV using ASTM E140 data where tabulated.

Recommended Technical References

ASM Handbook Vol. 8 — Mechanical Testing and Evaluation

Definitive reference for all hardness testing methods, ASTM E140 conversion tables, indentation mechanics, and case depth measurement procedures.

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The Hardness of Metals — Tabor (Oxford Classic)

The foundational physical treatment of hardness measurement theory, constraint factor, and the HV–UTS relationship that underpins all practical hardness conversion methods.

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Portable Leeb Rebound Hardness Tester — UCI / Rebound Field Unit

Field-portable hardness tester for in-situ measurements on large components — converts automatically between HV, HRC, HRB, HBW, and UTS.

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Mechanical Metallurgy — Dieter (SI Metric Edition)

Graduate-level treatment of hardness as a measure of flow stress, strain hardening, and the relationship between hardness, yield strength, and UTS in steels.

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