Rockwell Hardness Scale
The Industry Reference Standard

by Jeff Jackson, Mitchell Golf

Golf clubs may be constructed from various materials.  Among the most popular are 431 stainless steel, carbon steel and titanium.  Each of these metals, not to mention the number of other metals used in golf club manufacturing, have different properties.  One of the key properties used when discussing the metallurgy of a golf club head is hardness.  There are some players who claim to be able to tell if one club is softer than another, if one club can "work" the ball better than another and so on.  Whether they are actually feeling the metal in the head is debatable; what they are most likely feeling is a result of the club's particular head design.

In any event, there is a definitive measure of a metal's hardness.  The measure is known as the Rockwell Hardness Scale and uses an alpha-numeric designation to compare different metals.  The Rockwell Scale, developed in conjunction with the ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials) is the most often used measure of metal hardness in the world today.  In a Rockwell test, a metal ball or cone with a known hardness is pressed into the metal being tested at a load of up to 100 kilograms.  At the point of deformation of, or penetration into, the metal being tested, the Rockwell Hardness is defined.  For example, aluminum deforms much more quickly than stainless steel.  Its Rockwell Hardness is in the B50-60 range, while stainless steel has a hardness in the mid-C range.  The higher the alpha-numeric designation, the harder the metal.  That is a "C is harder than a "B", a "30" is harder than a "20", etc. 
 

Material

Hardness

Primary Use

Aluminum

B50-60
Softest

Woods, Putters

Carbon Steel

B60-70

Irons, Putters

304 Stainless  

B75  

Irons only

Beryllium Copper

B70-80

Irons, Putters

431 Stainless

C18-25

Irons, Putters

100% Titanium  

C24-28  

Woods  

6-4 Titanium

C32-36

Woods, Faces

17-4 Stainless

C34-38

Woods, Irons, Putters

450 Steel (supersteel) 

 C36-40  

Woods, Irons

15-5 Stainless

C36-44

Woods

Beta Titanium

C40+

Woods

Maraging Steel

C45-55
Hardest

Woods, Faces



Jeff Jackson is a successful author and was a key technical resource for both Dynacraft Golf and Mitchell Golf before moving on to Tour Golf.  The original article was published on Swingweight.com.