Hardness conversion chart: Rockwell, Brinell, Vickers, Knoop, and tensile.

Materials Reference ASTM E140 / ISO 18265 Updated May 2026

Hardness conversion tables per ASTM E140 and ISO 18265. Rockwell C (HRC), Rockwell B (HRB), Vickers (HV), Brinell (HB), Knoop (HK), and approximate ultimate tensile strength in MPa for steels. Use the right table for the right material — these conversions are empirical and material-specific.

How to use this chart

Hardness conversion is approximate, not exact. The same metal indented with different test methods produces different numerical results because each test has different indenter geometry, load, and depth of indentation. ASTM E140 standardizes empirical conversions for specific material classes — most reliably for unalloyed and low-alloy steel in the hardness range HV 200–800.

To use the tables: find your known hardness in the leftmost column, then read across to the converted scale. The tables below cover the practically useful range for engineering materials.

Tensile-from-hardness approximation

Tensile strength from Vickers (carbon/low-alloy steel)
Tensile (MPa) ≈ 3.45 × HV

This relationship holds within ±10% for unalloyed and low-alloy steel in the hardness range HV 200–650. Outside this range (very soft annealed steel or fully martensitic case-hardened steel above HV 650), the relationship breaks down. For non-ferrous metals it is not valid at all.

Hardened steels — HRC primary scale

Use this table for through-hardened or case-hardened carbon and alloy steels in the typical hardness range HRC 20–65. Source: ASTM E140 Table 1.

HRCHV (Vickers)HB (Brinell 3000 kg)HK (Knoop 500 g)Tensile (MPa, approx)
68940920
65832846
627467632570
606977132400
58653615 (carbide)6702250
566135786302110
545775435941990
525445125611880
505134815301770
484844555021670
464584324761580
444344094521500
424123904301420
403923714101350
383723533901280
363543363721220
343363193541160
323193023371100
303052863201050
282912713051000
26277258290955
24263247276905
22253237263870
20244226251835

Softer steels — HRB primary scale

Use this table for unhardened steel, low-carbon steel, copper, brass, and cast iron in the range HRB 60–100. The Brinell scale (3000 kg load, 10 mm carbide ball) is typically the field method of choice in this range because the larger indentation averages out surface roughness.

HRBHV (Vickers)HB (Brinell 3000 kg)HRC (approx)Tensile (MPa, approx)
10024024022820
9822822820780
9621921918750
9421221216725
9220320314700
9019519512670
8818918910650
861821828625
841761766600
821701704580
801631632560
78157157540
76153153525
74148148510
72143143495
70139139480
68134134465
66130130450
64126126435
62122122420
60118118405

Non-ferrous metals — typical hardness ranges

For non-ferrous metals, ASTM E140 conversions to Rockwell or Brinell are not valid across the board. Use Vickers HV directly. Reference values for common engineering alloys:

MaterialTypical HVTypical HBTensile (MPa)
Aluminum 1100-O (annealed)232390
Aluminum 1100-H14 (work-hardened)3232125
Aluminum 2024-T3137120470
Aluminum 5052-H326260230
Aluminum 6061-T610795310
Aluminum 7075-T6175150570
Brass C26000 (annealed)6865325
Brass C26000 (hard)140130525
Copper C11000 (annealed)4845220
Copper C11000 (hard)105100345
Titanium Grade 2 (CP)200195345
Titanium Ti-6Al-4V (annealed)340320950
Stainless 304 (annealed)180170515
Stainless 304 (work-hardened)240225725
Stainless 316 (annealed)185175520
Stainless 410 (annealed)155150485
Stainless 410 (hardened)4151450

Indian steel grades — hardness on production

Production hardness for common Indian engineering steels after standard heat treatment, useful for incoming inspection acceptance ranges:

Grade (IS / EN)ConditionHRCHVTensile (MPa)
EN8 (080M40)Normalized200620
EN8Hardened & tempered22–32250–320850–1100
EN24 (817M40)Hardened & tempered28–34290–340950–1150
EN36 (655M13, case-hardening)Case-hardened58–62 surface, 30–35 core650–750 surface
EN9 (070M55)Hardened & tempered30–40305–4101050–1400
EN353 (815M17, case-hardening)Case-hardened58–63 surface650–780 surface
SAE 1045 / IS C45Normalized180–210570–700
SAE 4140 / EN19 (709M40)Hardened & tempered28–35290–345950–1175

Notes on accuracy

Hardness conversions are statistical correlations from large empirical datasets, not exact mathematical relationships. The standard says so explicitly:

For acceptance criteria, test on the same scale as the spec If a drawing specifies "HRC 28–32 after temper", test on Rockwell C — do not test on Vickers and convert. Conversions have ±20–30 HV uncertainty that can flip a pass/fail verdict on borderline parts. The drawing scale is the controlling scale for FAI submissions; the rest are for cross-reference only.

5 common hardness mistakes

  1. Testing too close to an edge or another indentation. Each indentation needs at least 2.5× its own diagonal of clearance from any other indent or edge. Closer than that and you measure the deformed zone of the previous indent.
  2. Wrong load for the section thickness. Vickers HV30 on a 0.5mm sheet measures the supporting anvil as much as the sheet itself. Use Vickers HV1 or Knoop HK500 for thin sections.
  3. Converting case hardness to tensile. A case-hardened gear with surface HRC 60 has approximate surface tensile of 2400 MPa per the chart, but the core tensile is much lower — typically 1100 MPa for EN36. The gear will fail at core tensile, not surface tensile.
  4. Testing as-received surfaces. Rolled, drawn, or forged surfaces have cold-worked layers that read 50–100 HV harder than the bulk. Always grind or machine the surface before testing.
  5. Single-point testing for production acceptance. Hardness varies across a part. Most standards require 3–5 readings at specified locations and acceptance based on average or all-pass.
Need a specific conversion not in the chart? The MetricMech Hardness Conversion Calculator handles arbitrary input values and material classes, applies interpolation between tabulated values, and produces a documented conversion record with the source standard reference. Useful for FAI submissions where the converted value must be traceable.

References

For interactive conversion with custom inputs, see the Hardness Conversion Calculator. For material weight and density references, see the Material Weight Calculator.