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Home > Rockwell scale


The Rockwell scale characterises the indentation hardness of materials through the depth of penetration of an indenter, loaded on a material sample and compared to the penetration in some reference material. It is one of several definitions of hardness in materials science.

It is typically used in engineering and metallurgy and is most common in the USA. Its popularity arises from its speed, reliability, robustness, resolution and small area of indentation.

There are several alternative scales, the most commonly used being the "B", and "C" scales. Both express hardness as an arbitrary dimensionless number

The B-scale is used for softer materials (such as aluminum, brass, and softer steels). It employs a hardened steel ball as the indenter and a 100kg weight to obtain a value expressed as "HRB".

The C-scale, for harder materials, uses a diamond cone, known as a Brale indenter and a 150kg weight to obtain a value expressed as "HRC".

Common values

Readings below HRC 20 are generally considered unreliable, as are readings much above HRB 100.

Several other scales, including the extensive A-scale, are used for specialised applications. There are special scales for measuring case-hardened specimens.

Good practice includes:

Standards

Materials science Dimensionless numbers

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