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Shore Hardness Explained: Which Rubber Hardness Do You Need?

Hero image featuring Shore A durometer testing rubber sheet hardness to ISO 7619-1 standard

Shore Hardness Explained: Which Rubber Hardness Do You Need?

Shore hardness is a standardised measure of a rubber’s resistance to permanent indentation — expressed as a number from 0 to 100 on either the Shore A or Shore D scale. The higher the number, the harder the material. For rubber and elastomers, Shore A is the relevant scale: a soft silicone sponge might measure 20 Shore A, a standard nitrile gasket 70 Shore A, and a hard engineering rubber compound 90 Shore A. Understanding where your application sits on that scale is the difference between a seal that holds and one that fails within weeks.

Every rubber product Delta Rubber supplies — sheet, extrusions, gaskets, O-rings, matting — is specified by Shore hardness. If you are sourcing rubber for a sealing, vibration, or wear application and you are unsure which hardness to specify, this guide gives you the decision logic to get it right first time.

What Is Shore Hardness?

Shore hardness quantifies how much a standardised indenter tip penetrates a rubber surface under a defined load, measured by a durometer instrument. The test is defined under ISO 7619-1 and ASTM D2240. A spring-loaded probe is pressed against the material surface; the depth of penetration after a fixed dwell time (typically 15 seconds) is converted to a hardness value on a 0–100 scale.

A reading of 0 indicates the indenter sank fully into the material — no measurable resistance. A reading of 100 indicates zero penetration — the material is effectively incompressible under the test conditions. In practice, vulcanised rubbers for industrial use fall between 40 and 90 Shore A.

The Shore hardness of a rubber compound is controlled during manufacture through the polymer type, filler loading (carbon black, silica), and the degree of vulcanisation (crosslink density). This means that for most base rubbers — nitrile, EPDM, neoprene, silicone — multiple hardness grades are available to order.

Shore A vs Shore D: What Is the Difference?

The two scales use different indenter geometries and spring loads, making them suited to different material stiffness ranges:

ScaleIndenter TypeMaterial RangeTypical Applications
Shore ATruncated cone (35° angle)Soft to medium elastomersRubber sheet, gaskets, O-rings, seals, hose, matting
Shore DSharp cone (30° angle)Hard rubber, semi-rigid plasticsHard rubber rollers, polyurethane, ebonite, rigid compounds

For rubber engineering applications — gaskets, seals, extrusions, vibration mounts, matting — Shore A is the specification you will encounter. Shore D becomes relevant only when the material is so hard it falls above ~95 Shore A, at which point Shore A values compress and lose resolution.

Conversion between the two scales is approximate and material-dependent. As a rough guide, Shore A 95 is roughly equivalent to Shore D 40, but this relationship is not linear and should not be relied upon for precise specification.

How Is Shore Hardness Measured?

Under ISO 7619-1:2010 (and the equivalent ASTM D2240), the test requires:

  • A minimum specimen thickness of 6 mm — thinner specimens compress against the backing and give artificially high readings
  • A flat, parallel surface — curved extrusions or profiled seals require test blocks if standard testing is needed
  • A contact force applied within 1 second, with the reading taken at 15 seconds dwell time — instantaneous readings are higher and do not account for creep
  • An ambient temperature of 23°C ± 2°C — rubber hardness is temperature-sensitive; a neoprene gasket measured at 5°C will read several points harder than at 23°C

Hardness values in supplier data sheets should always reference which standard and dwell time was used. When comparing grades from different suppliers, confirm both are quoting to the same test method.

Shore A Hardness Ranges: What Each Band Means

Shore A RangeTactile DescriptionTypical Rubber Forms
20–40Very soft, foam-likeSilicone sponge, soft foam seals, low-compression gaskets
40–50Soft, easily deformed by handSoft silicone sheet, latex profiles, light-duty O-rings
50–60Medium-soft, noticeable resistanceAnti-vibration mounts, low-load seals, silicone medical profiles
60–70Medium — the most common industrial rangeStandard gaskets, EPDM sheet, neoprene sheet, general-purpose seals
70–80Medium-hard, resists compressionStandard O-rings, nitrile seals, hose walls, rubber matting
80–90Hard, requires deliberate force to compressHigh-pressure seals, roller coverings, engineering extrusions
90–95Very hardHard rubber engineering parts, wear pads

The 60–80 Shore A band covers the majority of industrial sealing and gasketing applications. Most catalogue rubber sheet is supplied at 60 ± 5 Shore A or 70 ± 5 Shore A unless a specific grade is requested.

ubber samples at 40, 70 and 90 Shore A showing the range of hardness grades available from Delta Rubber
Various Shore A hardness grade rubber materials.

Which Shore Hardness Do You Need?

This is the question most suppliers do not answer. Below is an application-by-application decision guide based on how hardness affects seal compression, extrusion resistance, and vibration attenuation.

Gaskets and Static Seals

Gaskets need to compress sufficiently under bolt load to conform to flange surface irregularities, but must not extrude laterally or cold-flow under sustained compression.

ApplicationRecommended Shore AReason
Low-pressure flanges, water service50–65Soft enough to seal under low bolt loads
General industrial flanges60–75Balance of conformability and extrusion resistance
High-pressure flanges (>10 bar)70–80Prevents extrusion from under the flange face
Metal-to-metal face seals60–70Controlled compression without excessive load
Irregular or rough flange faces50–60Softer compound conforms to surface defects

For cut gaskets from rubber sheet60–70 Shore A is the standard starting specification for most flange sealing applications. Move harder if the pressure rating demands it; move softer only if the flange bolt load is insufficient to compress a standard-hardness compound.

O-Rings and Dynamic Seals

The ISO 3601 standard defines O-ring cross-section tolerances, but hardness selection is driven by the application type:

ConditionRecommended Shore AReason
Static O-ring, low pressure70Industry standard, suitable for the majority of static seals
Dynamic reciprocating seal70–80Reduces abrasion wear from cyclic movement
High-pressure hydraulic seal (>70 bar)80–90Prevents extrusion into the gap
Chemical media with solvent swell risk70–80Swell effectively softens the compound; start harder
Low-temperature service (below -20°C)50–60Rubber stiffens at low temperature; start softer to maintain seal

Delta’s rubber seals and O-rings are available in standard 70 Shore A nitrile and EPDM grades, with harder or softer grades available on request.

Anti-Vibration Mounts and Isolators

Anti-vibration performance is governed by the dynamic stiffness of the rubber element, which correlates with static hardness but is not identical to it. However, Shore A is the practical specification tool:

Isolation RequirementRecommended Shore AReason
Light machinery, acoustic isolation30–45Maximum deflection, lowest natural frequency
General industrial machinery45–55Balance of load capacity and isolation efficiency
Heavy plant, high static load55–70Load capacity increases with hardness
Shock absorption (impact loads)40–55Softer compound absorbs impact energy rather than transmitting it

TICO anti-vibration pads and mounts are engineered with defined load-deflection characteristics — but for bespoke moulded mounts, Shore A hardness selection directly determines performance.

Rubber Matting

For industrial and safety matting applications, hardness affects both underfoot comfort and slip resistance:

Use CaseRecommended Shore ANotes
Anti-fatigue matting (standing workstations)40–60Softer compound provides cushioning to reduce fatigue
General workshop/factory floor60–75Durability and resistance to point loading from machinery
Electrical safety matting (IEC 61111)60–70Specified to class, not hardness — but standard compounds fall here
Anti-slip rubber matting50–70Slip rating is determined by surface profile, not hardness alone

Delta’s rubber matting range covers anti-fatigue, electrical safety, and anti-slip applications — each with defined hardness specifications.

rubber gaskets being used manufactured from various shore a hardness rubber grades from Delta Rubber
Gaskets in use, manufactured from various Shore A hardness grades.

Shore Hardness by Rubber Material

Different base rubbers are available in different hardness ranges. Not every hardness can be achieved in every compound — the polymer chemistry sets the upper and lower bounds:

MaterialStandard Range (Shore A)Most Common Industrial Grade
EPDM40–8060–70 Shore A
Nitrile (NBR)40–9060–70 Shore A
Neoprene (CR)40–8060–70 Shore A
Silicone20–8040–60 Shore A
Viton (FKM)60–9065–75 Shore A
Natural/SBR30–8060–70 Shore A

Silicone operates at significantly lower hardness values than other elastomers for the same mechanical feel — a 50 Shore A silicone and a 50 Shore A nitrile will behave differently under compression because silicone has a much lower elastic modulus. Hardness alone does not capture the full mechanical picture; for critical applications, compressive stress-strain data should be consulted.

Common Misapplications and How to Avoid Them

The most frequent specification error is selecting a gasket material by chemical compatibility alone and ignoring hardness. A technically correct material choice can still fail if the hardness is mismatched to the joint design.

Gasket Extrusion

Caused by specifying too soft a compound for the operating pressure. If the rubber has room to flow laterally — a wide unconfined groove, a large bolt pitch, or a high internal pressure — a 50 Shore A compound will extrude even if it would seal correctly in a constrained joint. The fix is moving to 70–80 Shore A or adding a physical extrusion stop.

Inadequate Sealing Under Low Bolt Load

The opposite problem. Flange designs on older plant often used asbestos gaskets that required minimal bolt load. Substituting with a 75 Shore A rubber gasket can result in leakage because the bolt load is insufficient to deform the harder material into the flange surface. Moving to 50–60 Shore A or a cellular/sponge-grade compound resolves this.

Cold Temperature Hardening

Catches engineers who specify correctly for ambient conditions but do not account for service temperature. A 70 Shore A nitrile seal at -20°C may be effectively 90+ Shore A — too hard to seal in a low-load joint. Where low-temperature sealing is required, specify a softer baseline compound or switch to a low-temperature compound formulated for flexibility at -40°C or below.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Shore A hardness in rubber?

Shore A hardness is a measure of a rubber’s resistance to indentation, tested according to ISO 7619-1 and ASTM D2240. A durometer presses a standardised probe into the rubber surface under a defined load; the depth of penetration gives a value on a 0–100 scale. Higher numbers mean harder rubber. The Shore A scale covers soft to medium elastomers — virtually all rubber sheet, gasket, seal, and extrusion materials are specified in Shore A.

What does 70 Shore A mean?

70 Shore A is the most common industrial rubber hardness specification. It represents a medium-firm compound — firm enough to resist extrusion under moderate pressure, soft enough to compress and conform to sealing faces under normal bolt loads. Standard nitrile O-rings, EPDM gasket sheet, and most general-purpose rubber extrusions are supplied at 70 ± 5 Shore A unless otherwise specified.

What is the difference between Shore A and Shore D?

Shore A and Shore D use different indenter geometries and are designed for different material stiffness ranges. Shore A covers soft to medium rubbers (20–95 Shore A). Shore D covers hard rubbers, rigid polyurethanes, and semi-rigid plastics. For all standard rubber sealing, gasketing, and matting applications, Shore A is the relevant specification. Shore D is only encountered in hard engineering rubber components or thermoplastic materials.

Which rubber hardness is best for gaskets?

For most flanged joint applications, 60–70 Shore A is the correct starting point. For high-pressure services above 10 bar, move to 70–80 Shore A to prevent extrusion. For low bolt-load flanges or rough sealing faces, use 50–60 Shore A to ensure adequate conformability. The correct hardness depends on the joint geometry, bolt load, and operating pressure — not just the media being sealed.

Can rubber hardness change in service?

Yes. Rubber compounds can harden or soften depending on the service environment. Prolonged exposure to elevated temperatures causes thermal ageing and hardening in most elastomers. Exposure to solvents, fuels, or swelling media softens the rubber. Repeated compressive cycling under bolt load causes stress relaxation, effectively reducing the sealing load over time. These changes are material and environment specific — contact Delta’s technical team when service life or in-service condition changes are a concern.

Why does rubber hardness matter for O-rings?

O-ring hardness determines how the seal behaves under pressure. Too soft (below 60 Shore A for hydraulic service) and the O-ring will extrude into the clearance gap, leading to nibbling damage and rapid seal failure. Too hard and the O-ring will not deform sufficiently to fill the groove and maintain contact with the sealing faces. Standard hydraulic O-rings are 70 Shore A; high-pressure applications specify 80–90 Shore A, often combined with back-up rings to control extrusion.

Shore hardness is a foundational specification for every rubber sealing and engineering application. Getting it right means understanding not just what the number means, but how hardness interacts with joint design, operating pressure, temperature, and media exposure. The 60–80 Shore A range covers the majority of industrial gasketing and sealing needs — but the right choice within that range is determined by the specific conditions of your application.

For technical guidance on hardness selection, contact Delta Rubber Limited. Browse the full range of rubber sheetgasketsseals, and extrusions — all specified with Shore hardness data — at deltarubber.co.uk/products/.