What's the Hardness of the different 3D printing materials?

Hardness is a measure of how resistant solid matter is to various permanent shape changes when a compressive force is applied. There are different ways to measure hardness: scratch hardness, indentation hardness, and rebound hardness. Most commonly one refers to “Indentation Hardness” when talking about hardness. For hard plastics, the most common norm for hardness is the Vickers Hardness test, where a round shape is pushed into a surface with a fixed force. The indentation depth is a measure for the hardness of the material: the deeper the indentation, the lower the Vickers Hardness value and therefore the lower the hardness.

Material
Units ASTM#
Agilus
Shore A
D2240 30 - 35
Agilus Black
Shore A
D2240
30 - 35
Aluminum (AlSi10Mg)
HV5 DIN EN ISO 6506-1
114 - 124 (after heat treatment)
PA 12 (SLS)
Shore D/A
DIN 53505
D 75 +/- 2
PA-AF Shore D/A
DIN 53505
D 76 +/- 2
PA-GF Shore D/A
DIN 53505
D 80 +/- 2
Poly1500 Shore D
D2240
80 - 82
ProtoGen White Shore D
D2240
88
Stainless Steel (316L) HRB DIN EN ISO 6508-1
89 (after heat treatment)
Titanium (TiAl6V4)
HV5
DIN EN ISO 6507-1
308 - 332 (after heat treatment)
TuskXC2700T
Shore D
D2240
81
TuskXC2700W
Shore D
D2240
81
Ultrasint TPU 90A-01 Shore A DIN ISO 7619-1 88
VeroWhitePlus
Shore D

83

Was this article helpful?

Can’t find what you’re looking for?

Our customer service team is happy to help!