Hardness Conversion Reference
Summary
Hardness conversion is critical for machinists to determine appropriate [[toolholder-selection]], cutting parameters, and [[insert-selection-guide]] choices. Understanding the relationship between Rockwell C (HRC), Rockwell B (HRB), Brinell (BHN), and Vickers (HV) scales allows proper material identification and machining strategy selection. Hardness directly affects machinability — too soft creates [[chip-control]] issues and built-up edge, while excessive hardness requires specialized tooling and reduced cutting speeds to prevent catastrophic [[tool-wear-diagnosis]] failures.
Hardness Scale Conversions
Primary Conversion Chart
| HRC | HRB | BHN (3000kg) | Vickers (HV) | Approx. Tensile (ksi) | Machinability Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 68 | - | 739 | 940 | - | CBN/Ceramic only |
| 65 | - | 688 | 832 | - | Hard turning territory |
| 60 | - | 595 | 697 | - | Carbide insert limit |
| 55 | - | 495 | 595 | - | Hardened steels |
| 50 | - | 415 | 513 | - | Heat treated threshold |
| 45 | - | 352 | 446 | 229 | Quenched & tempered |
| 40 | - | 302 | 392 | 196 | Medium carbon steels |
| 35 | - | 262 | 345 | 170 | Normalized steels |
| 30 | - | 229 | 302 | 150 | Mild steels |
| 25 | 100 | 202 | 266 | 134 | Annealed condition |
| 20 | 97 | 179 | 238 | 120 | Soft steels |
Material-Specific Hardness Ranges
[[4140-steel]]:
- Annealed: 15-20 HRC (180-220 BHN)
- Normalized: 25-30 HRC (240-280 BHN)
- Heat treated: 35-45 HRC (320-430 BHN)
[[d2-tool-steel]]:
- Annealed: 20-25 HRC (210-250 BHN)
- Hardened: 58-62 HRC (650-720 BHN)
[[304-stainless]]:
- Annealed: 15-25 HRC (150-200 BHN)
- Work hardened surface: 35-45 HRC
[[cast-iron]]:
- Gray iron: 20-30 HRC (180-260 BHN)
- Ductile iron: 25-35 HRC (200-300 BHN)
Machining Implications by Hardness
Soft Materials (Under 25 HRC)
Cutting speeds: Higher SFM possible but chip formation problematic
- Issues: Built-up edge, poor [[surface-finish-problems]], work hardening
- Solutions: Sharp tools, positive rake angles, consistent feed rates
- Tooling: HSS often superior to carbide for chip breaking
Medium Hardness (25-40 HRC)
Optimal machining range for most operations
- Cutting speeds: Standard manufacturer recommendations apply
- Tooling: Standard carbide grades perform well
- Operations: All conventional machining methods viable
Hard Materials (40-55 HRC)
Requires specialized approach
- Cutting speeds: Reduce SFM by 30-50% from annealed recommendations
- Feeds: Maintain chip load to prevent [[work-hardening]]
- Tooling: Tougher carbide grades, consider ceramic for continuous cuts
Very Hard Materials (55+ HRC)
Hard turning/milling territory
- Cutting speeds: 50-200 SFM typical range
- Tooling: CBN, ceramic, or specialized carbide only
- Depth of cut: Must exceed work-hardened zone (0.006" minimum)
Hardness Testing Methods
Rockwell Testing
Most common in machine shops
- HRC Scale: Diamond cone, 150kg load, for hardened steels
- HRB Scale: 1/16" steel ball, 100kg load, for softer materials
- Portable testers: ±2 HRC accuracy typical
Brinell Testing
Best for castings and forgings
- Method: 10mm steel ball, 3000kg load
- Advantage: Large impression averages material variations
- Range: 100-650 BHN covers most machined materials
Vickers Testing
Most accurate but slowest
- Method: Diamond pyramid indenter
- Advantage: Single scale covers all materials
- Use: Laboratory verification of critical parts
Shop Floor Conversion Rules
Quick Conversions (±10% accuracy)
- HRC to BHN: BHN ≈ (HRC × 10) + 150 (for HRC 20-50)
- BHN to HRC: HRC ≈ (BHN - 150) ÷ 10 (approximate)
- Tensile strength: ksi ≈ BHN ÷ 3.3 (rough estimate)
Field Testing Methods
File test (traditional but inaccurate):
- New file cuts: Under 60 HRC
- File skates: Over 62 HRC
- File bites slightly: 60-62 HRC range
Spark test (steel only):
- More sparks = higher carbon content (not hardness)
- Useful for material identification, not hardness measurement
Common Problems
Inconsistent Hardness Readings
Causes:
- Surface decarburization after heat treatment
- Work-hardened surface from previous machining
- Improper test surface preparation
- Scale thickness variations on hot-rolled materials
Solutions:
- Test on freshly machined surface
- Multiple readings across part
- Consider core hardness vs. surface hardness
Heat Treatment Verification
Problem: Parts not meeting hardness specifications after heat treatment
- Check: Uniformity across part (especially thick sections)
- Verify: Proper quench medium and cooling rate
- Test: Multiple locations, especially stress concentration areas
Machining Parameter Selection
Problem: Generic hardness-to-speed charts giving poor results
- Reality: [[inconel-718]] at 35 HRC machines differently than [[4140-steel]] at 35 HRC
- Solution: Use material-specific data, not just hardness number
- Consider: Work hardening tendency, thermal conductivity, chemical composition
Advanced Applications
Hard Turning (50+ HRC)
Typical parameters:
- Speeds: 200-400 SFM with CBN tools
- Feeds: 0.004-0.012 IPR depending on nose radius
- Depth: 0.020-0.100" per pass
- Coolant: Flood or high-pressure preferred
[[thread-milling]] Hard Materials (60+ HRC)
Example from field: M1 tool steel at 64 HRC
- Tool: TiAlN coated carbide thread mill
- Speed: 150-200 SFM maximum
- Feed: 0.0005-0.001 IPT
- Method: Multiple spring passes, flood coolant critical
Related Topics
- [[insert-selection-guide]] — Carbide grade selection by material hardness
- [[work-hardening]] — How cutting parameters affect surface hardness
- [[tool-wear-diagnosis]] — Recognizing hardness-related tool failures
- [[4140-steel]] — Common heat treatable steel hardness ranges
- [[d2-tool-steel]] — Tool steel hardness and machining considerations
- [[surface-finish-grades]] — Hardness effects on achievable surface finish