BS ISO 48 is the standard that specifies four methods for the determination of the hardness of vulcanized or thermoplastic rubbers on flat surfaces (standard-hardness methods) and four methods for the determination of the apparent hardness of curved surfaces (apparent-hardness methods). The hardness is expressed in international rubber hardness degrees (IRHD). The methods cover the hardness range from 10 IRHD to 100 IRHD.
These methods differ primarily in the diameter of the indenting ball and the magnitude of the indenting force, these being chosen to suit the particular application.
BS ISO 48 does not specify a method for the determination of hardness by a pocket hardness meter, which is described in BS ISO 7619-2.
BS ISO 48 does not specify the determination of the apparent hardness of rubber-covered rollers, which is specified in BS ISO 7267 (all parts).
The hardness test specified in BS ISO 48 is intended to provide a rapid measurement of rubber stiffness, unlike hardness tests on other materials which measure resistance to permanent deformation.
Hardness is measured from the depth of indentation of a spherical indentor, under a specified force, into a rubber test piece. An empirical relationship between depth of indentation and Young's modulus for a perfectly elastic isotropic material has been used to derive a hardness scale which can conveniently be used for most rubbers.
When it is required to determine the value of Young's modulus itself, it is expected that an appropriate test method be used, for example that described in BS ISO 7743.
The guide to hardness testing, BS ISO 18517, can also be a useful reference.
People using BS ISO 48 should be familiar with normal laboratory practice. This standard does not purport to address all of the safety problems, if any, associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user to establish appropriate safety and health practices and to ensure compliance with any national regulatory conditions.
Certain procedures specified in this International Standard may involve the use or generation of substances, or the generation of waste, that could constitute a local environmental hazard. Reference should be made to appropriate documentation on safe handling and disposal after use.
BS ISO 48 specifies the following four methods for the determination of standard hardness:
The value of the hardness obtained by method N within the ranges 85 IRHD to 95 IRHD and 30 IRHD to 35 IRHD might not agree precisely with that obtained using method H or method L, respectively. The difference is not normally significant for technical purposes.
Because of various surface effects in the rubber and the possibility of slight surface roughness (produced, for example, by buffing), the microtest might not always give results agreeing with those obtained by the normal test.
BS ISO 48 also specifies four methods, CN, CH, CL and CM, for the determination of the apparent hardness of curved surfaces. These methods are modifications of methods N, H, L and M, respectively, and are used when the rubber surface tested is curved, in which case there are two possibilities:
a) the test piece or product tested is large enough for the hardness instrument to rest upon it; or
b) the test piece or product tested is small enough for both the test piece and the instrument to rest upon a common support.
A variant of b) would be where the test piece rests upon the specimen table of the instrument.
Apparent hardness can also be measured on non-standard flat test pieces using methods N, H, L and M.
The procedures described cannot provide for all possible shapes and dimensions of test piece, but cover some of the commonest types, such as O-rings.
This edition of BS ISO 48 cancels and replaces the fourth edition (ISO 48:2007), of which it constitutes a minor revision intended to update the precision statements in Annex B. It also incorporates the Technical Corrigendum ISO 48:2007/Cor.1:2009.
ISO 48:2010