LONDONDERRY,
If you are processing in accordance with MIL-A-8625A type III, there is no specific requirement for coating hardness. If you refer to MIL-A-8625 table II, there are only process control test requirements for type III coating weight, coating thickness, and abrasion resistance. I believe the A rev of MIL-A-8625 you specify states the abrasion resistance test shall be performed in accordance with FED-STD-141 method 6192.1. The most recent
rev D of FED-STD-141 states method 6192.1 has been replaced with
ASTM D4060, which I don't have a copy of.
Basically,
MIL-A-8625 allows use of any process that conforms to the specification requirements. In your case, the coating can have any hardness as long as it passes the process control test for abrasion resistance. So if you simply specify
"anodize per MIL-A-8625, type III", then you have no way of knowing precisely what the coating hardness will actually be. If you need to ensure the coating will have a certain minimum hardness, then you should include a supplementary QA requirement to verify coating hardness in addition to the basic MIL-A-8625A, type III process. Of course your anodize vendor will not like this, since it will require them to either perform NDI verifying the coating hardness of one (or possibly every) part in each batch processed, or develop a controlled/validated process for coating the parts that ensures a consistent/conforming result.
I'm sure this seems like a big hassle. But if your customer is
"highly concerned" about the anodize coating on the product you deliver having a certain minimum hardness, then this is what you need to do.
Hope that helps.