There is a specification on the Rebound Hammer in ASTM - no question about it. ASTM gives the method to carry out the test and to report the results - they do not tell or guide you on how you interpret the result from the point of view that you have taken. Given the test result, it is up to you to apply your engineering judgment on the test value and to see if you believe it enough to accept the concrete based on it.
I am going to quote Shetty for you:
"Schmidt's rebound hammer developed in 1948 is one of the commonly adapted equipments for mearsuring the surface hardness. . .
"Each hammer varies considerable in performance and needs clibration for use on conrete made with the aggregates from specific source. The test can be conducted horizontally, vertically . . . or at intermediate angles. At each angle the rebound number will be different for the same concrete and will require separate calibration or correction chart. . . .
"Limitation: Although, rebound hammer provides a quick inexpensive means of checking the uniformity of concrete, it has serious limitations and these must be recognized. The results are affected by:
a. Smoothness of surface under test
b. Size, shape and rigidity of the specimen.
c. age of specimen.
d. surface and internal moisture condition of the concrete.
e. type of coarse aggregate.
f. type of cement.
g. type of mould.
h. carbonation of concrete surface.
"Rebound Number and Strength of Concrete
Investigations have shown that there is a general correlation between compressive strength aof concret and rrebound number; however,there is a wide degree of disagreement among various research workers regarding the accuracy of estimation of strength from rebound readings. The variation of strength of a properly calibrated hammer may lie between plus/minue 15% and plus/minus 20%.
" . . . 1965 and 1967 . . . international survey . . . spoke agasint the use of Schmidt rebound hammer in acceptance testing. The consensus was that, "the Schmidt rebound hammer is useful to very useful in checking uniformity of concrete and comparing one concrete against another but it can only be used a s rough indication of concrete strength in absolute terms."
Given this and my previous post, the call, mon ami, is yours.
![[cheers] [cheers] [cheers]](/data/assets/smilies/cheers.gif)
and good luck.