Hardness Converter
Convert between Brinell (HB), Rockwell (HRC/HRB), Vickers (HV), and approximate tensile strength using ASTM E140.
CalculatorASTM E140 Reference Data
| HRC | HV | HB | HRB | Tensile (MPa) | ~Mohs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
How to Use
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1
Enter a hardness value
Type any known hardness number into the input field — for example, 30 HRC or 200 HB.
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2
Select the source scale
Choose the scale your value is measured in: Brinell (HB), Rockwell C (HRC), Rockwell B (HRB), or Vickers (HV). Or click a preset button.
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3
Read the converted results
The tool instantly displays equivalent values on all four scales, an approximate Mohs rating, estimated tensile strength, and a typical material at that hardness level.
FAQ
Why are hardness conversions approximate?
What is the difference between Brinell and Rockwell hardness?
Which hardness scale should I use for my material?
Can Mohs hardness be used for metals?
What is the difference between macro and micro hardness tests?
About
Hardness testing is one of the oldest and most widely used methods for evaluating the mechanical properties of metals. The concept dates to 1722, when Réaumur compared the scratch resistance of metals to minerals, but modern indentation hardness began with Johan August Brinell’s landmark presentation at the 1900 Paris Exposition. Brinell proposed pressing a hardened steel ball into a surface under a known load and measuring the resulting impression—a method still in daily use more than 120 years later.
In 1919, Stanley P. Rockwell patented a differential-depth machine that could test finished parts on the production floor without damaging them. His Rockwell C scale became the de facto language for specifying heat-treated steel. A year later, Robert L. Smith and George E. Sandland at Vickers Ltd. introduced a diamond-pyramid indenter that works across the entire range from soft copper to cemented carbides, giving birth to the Vickers (HV) scale. Together, these three scales cover the full spectrum of engineering metals—from dead-soft annealed copper at 50 HV to tungsten-carbide composites exceeding 1,500 HV.
ASTM International published the first edition of E140 (Standard Hardness Conversion Tables for Metals) in 1953, unifying decades of empirical correlation data. Today E140 is the global reference for converting between Brinell, Rockwell, Vickers, and approximate tensile-strength values. The conversions are inherently approximate because each test measures a slightly different mechanical response—plastic flow for Brinell, elastic recovery for Rockwell, and pyramid geometry for Vickers. Despite this, the tables agree with real-world lab data to within a few percent for most carbon and alloy steels, making them indispensable in materials selection, quality control, and failure analysis.
Modern hardness testing remains essential across industries. Automotive manufacturers specify minimum case-hardness for gears and bearings using HRC. Aerospace engineers verify titanium forging hardness with Vickers micro-indentation. Oil-and-gas pipelines require Brinell readings to confirm weld-zone toughness. Even the Mohs scratch scale, originally designed for minerals, sees use in estimating the abrasion resistance of metal surfaces in mining and earthmoving equipment.
How to Use
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1
Enter the Hardness Value and Scale
Type in your measured hardness number and select the scale: Rockwell B or C (HRB/HRC), Vickers (HV), Brinell (HBW), or Knoop (HK).
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2
Select the Target Hardness Scale
Choose the hardness scale you need to convert to — for example, converting an HRC reading to HV for weld procedure qualification documentation.
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3
Read the Converted Value and Equivalent Tensile Strength
The converted hardness and the approximate ultimate tensile strength (UTS) estimate for carbon and low-alloy steels are displayed, with a note on the applicable composition range of the conversion.
About
Hardness testing is one of the most widely performed mechanical tests in materials processing and quality control because it is fast, low-cost, and essentially non-destructive. The four major scales — Rockwell, Vickers, Brinell, and Knoop — each serve different applications and material types, and converting between them is a daily requirement in manufacturing, heat treatment verification, and weld inspection.
ASME and ASTM provide standard hardness conversion tables (ASTM E140) that cover carbon steels, alloy steels, and austenitic stainless steels separately, acknowledging that the relationship between scales is material-specific. The AlloyFYI Hardness Converter implements these standard tables with interpolation for values between tabulated points, and appends the ASTM A370 tensile strength estimate for steels to provide immediate engineering context. Understanding the limitations of these conversions — particularly for non-standard materials and surface treatments — is as important as knowing the converted value itself.