Math behind rockwell hardness measurement

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the force of a pin impacting solid metal, knowledge of the indenter's shape, indentation depth, and the metal's mechanical properties is crucial. The Rockwell Hardness method involves applying two forces: an initial load (F0) followed by a significantly larger load. Identifying the appropriate Rockwell notation (HRB, HRC, etc.) and corresponding force values is essential for accurate calculations. A Rockwell hardness table can provide useful reference data, though language barriers may complicate access to this information. Understanding these principles is key to solving the problem effectively.
metjim
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
I need to calculate the force of a pin impacting a solid metal. I know the shape of the indenter, the precise shape and depth of the indentation and the mechanical properties of the solid metal including modulus, yield and ultimate strength. The pin is being driven by ultrasonic wave guide so it is not simply a gravity problem.
In my mind this is the basic equation that Rockwell Hardness uses with the exception that they know the force and indenter shape and measure the depth of indentation to calculate hardness.
Does anyone know how to solve this?
Thanks
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
If you are referring to the standard Rockwell method then there are two forces that are applied, the first F0 is applied first then another load, significantly larger than the first, is applied.

Considering your case you could sort out the list of indenters and their respective Rockwell notation (HRB,HRC..etc) and then look at the force value. Now I have a Rockwell table at hand over here but it is in my national language and from what I can see unless you're indenter is a 1/16 inch sphere, you're safe. Since there's pretty much about five different options with a 1/16 inch sphere.
 

Similar threads

Replies
1
Views
9K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Replies
24
Views
9K
Replies
27
Views
4K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
9K
Back
Top