Lexikon Kammerer Gewinde

Actual surface hardness

Actual surface hardness describes the measured hardness of a material surface after manufacturing, heat treatment, or surface treatment. It indicates how resistant the surface is to penetration, wear, or mechanical stress.

Surface hardness particularly influences:

  • Wear resistance of the spindle, nut, or balls
  • Service life and load capacity of thread drives
  • Friction and sliding properties
  • Compressive strength of the contact surfaces

Influencing factors

  • Material: steel, bronze, aluminum, plastic
  • Heat treatment: hardening, tempering, nitriding
  • Surface treatment: grinding, induction heating, coatings
  • Manufacturing tolerances: roughness, surface profile, smoothing

The actual surface hardness can deviate from nominal or theoretical values and is therefore usually measured (e.g., using Rockwell, Vickers, or Brinell hardness testing).

Practical relevance

  • Critical for ball screws: raceway hardness determines contact pressure and service life
  • Decisive for friction and wear in trapezoidal thread drives
  • Basis for maintenance intervals, lubrication, and application limits
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