Rebound Hammer Test vs UPV Test: Which NDT Method is Right for Concrete?
The Rebound Hammer Test and UPV Test are India's most widely used non-destructive testing methods for in-situ concrete assessment. Each has specific strengths: the rebound hammer is fast for surface hardness surveys, while UPV detects internal cracks and voids. This guide compares both methods to help you choose the right approach.
Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) of concrete allows engineers to assess strength, integrity, and uniformity without damaging the structure. The two most widely used NDT methods in India are the Rebound Hammer Test (IS 13311 Part 2) and the Ultrasonic Pulse Velocity (UPV) Test (IS 13311 Part 1).
Rebound Hammer Test (Schmidt Hammer)
Principle
A spring-loaded hammer strikes the concrete surface. The rebound distance (Rebound Number, R) correlates with surface hardness, which approximates compressive strength.
IS 13311 Part 2 Requirements
- Minimum 12 readings per test area on a 300 mm × 300 mm grid
- Discard readings differing more than 6 units from the median
- Apply correction factor for angle of impact
Advantages and Limitations
- ✅ Fast, portable, minimal surface preparation
- ✅ Low cost — ideal for large-area screening surveys
- ❌ Accuracy ±25% — affected by carbonation, surface moisture, aggregate type
- ❌ Only assesses the surface layer (30–50 mm depth)
Ultrasonic Pulse Velocity (UPV) Test
Principle
Ultrasonic pulses (50–500 kHz) travel through concrete between transmitter and receiver transducers. Higher velocity = denser, stronger concrete. Lower velocity indicates voids, cracks, or poor compaction.
IS 13311 Part 1 Classification
- >4500 m/s — Excellent
- 3500–4500 m/s — Good
- 3000–3500 m/s — Medium
- <3000 m/s — Doubtful
Advantages and Limitations
- ✅ Detects internal cracks, voids, and honeycombing through the full cross-section
- ✅ Suitable for high-strength and underwater concrete
- ❌ Requires acoustic coupling gel on both transducers
- ❌ Rebar parallel to pulse path can artificially increase velocity readings
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Parameter | Rebound Hammer | UPV Test |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | IS 13311 Pt.2 | IS 13311 Pt.1 |
| Assesses | Surface hardness | Internal integrity + strength |
| Strength Accuracy | ±25% | ±15–20% |
| Speed | Very fast | Moderate |
| Best Use | Large area screening | Crack depth, void detection |
Combined Testing: The SONREB Method
For the most reliable in-situ strength estimate, use both methods together. The SONREB method correlates UPV values with Rebound Numbers to produce a combined strength estimate more accurate than either method alone — recommended by RILEM TC 43-CND for forensic structural investigations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can rebound hammer results replace cube test results?
No. IS 456 and IS 13311 both state NDT methods are supplementary to, not a replacement for, destructive cube tests. NDT results guide coring locations and identify variation zones.
What rebound number indicates M25 concrete?
Approximately R = 30–35 for horizontal impact on a smooth surface, but this varies with cement type and surface condition. Always calibrate against site-cast cores for accurate strength conversion.
Which UPV transducer frequency is best for structural concrete?
54 kHz transducers are ideal for most structural concrete up to 3 m path length. Higher frequencies (150–250 kHz) suit thin sections; lower frequencies (25–40 kHz) penetrate thick or heavily reinforced members.
Explore our Concrete NDT Equipment range including digital rebound hammers and UPV instruments.