A Digital Durometer Shore C (0-100HC) is a precision instrument used to measure the hardness of soft to medium-hard materials, particularly rubber, elastomers, gels, foams, and soft plastics. Here's a breakdown of what each term means:
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🔍 Key Features of the Durometer Shore C
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\n| Feature | \nDescription | \n
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| Digital | \nDisplays hardness values on an LCD screen—more accurate and easier to read than analog models. | \n
| Shore C | \nA specific Shore scale (per ASTM D2240) is used for softer materials than Shore A. | \n
| 0-100HC | \nIndicates the hardness range: 0 (very soft) to 100 (firmest measurable on Shore C scale). | \n
🧪 Common Applications of Durometer Shore C
\nShore C is ideal for materials too soft for Shore D, but too firm for Shore A, such as:
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- Soft rubber rollers \n
- Flexible foams \n
- Cellular plastics \n
- Elastomer blends \n
- Vinyls and flexible thermoplastics \n
📐 How It Works
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- The durometer indenter (a conical point under specified force) presses into the material. \n
- The digital readout shows the resistance level as a number from 0 to 100. \n
- Higher numbers = harder material. \n
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- Digital Durometer \n
- Type: Shore C \n
- Range: 0-100HC, China \n
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