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Industrial Fastening Knowledge · Industry Trends · Technical Insights

8.8, 10.9 and 12.9 Bolts: Mechanical Properties Comparison

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In daily inspection work, 8.8, 10.9, and 12.9 bolts are often placed on the same table for comparison. They may look similar after zinc plating or black oxide treatment, but their mechanical properties are very different.

For buyers, the key point is simple: do not choose bolt grade only by price or appearance. Grade affects tensile strength, yield strength, hardness, tightening behavior, and failure risk.

What the Numbers Mean

Metric bolt property classes follow a clear logic.

The first number relates to nominal tensile strength. The second number shows the ratio between yield strength and tensile strength.

For example, class 8.8 means about 800 MPa nominal tensile strength and about 80% yield ratio.

Bolt GradeNominal Tensile StrengthApprox. Yield StrengthCommon Use
8.8800 MPa640 MPaGeneral machinery, steel structures, brackets
10.91000 MPa900 MPaHeavy equipment, automotive, higher-load joints
12.91200 MPa1080 MPaHigh-stress assemblies, precision machinery

Buyers can compare available high-strength fasteners when selecting bolts for load-bearing applications.

Grade 8.8 Bolts

Practical Use

Class 8.8 bolts are common in industrial assemblies. They offer good strength, reasonable cost, and stable availability.

We often see them used in:

  • Machinery frames
  • Construction steelwork
  • Equipment bases
  • General structural brackets
  • Agricultural and industrial equipment

For standard supply, buyers can check standard fasteners and confirm the exact DIN, ISO, or drawing requirement.

Grade 10.9 Bolts

Higher Strength, More Control

Class 10.9 bolts provide higher strength than 8.8 bolts. They are useful where the joint needs stronger clamping force or better load capacity.

But higher strength also means stricter control. Heat treatment, hardness, thread quality, washer hardness, and torque method become more important.

Common mistakes include using soft washers or low-grade nuts with 10.9 bolts. That weakens the whole assembly.

Grade 12.9 Bolts

Strong but Less Forgiving

Class 12.9 bolts are high-strength fasteners. They are often used in compact, high-load assemblies where space is limited and strength demand is high.

They should not be selected casually. Over-tightening, poor coating choice, hydrogen embrittlement risk, or wrong installation can cause serious failure.

If surface protection is needed, review various coated fasteners and confirm whether the coating is suitable for high-strength bolts.

Selection Checklist for Buyers

Before placing an RFQ, confirm:

  1. Bolt standard: DIN, ISO, ASTM, or drawing
  2. Grade: 8.8, 10.9, or 12.9
  3. Size, length, pitch, and thread length
  4. Nut grade and washer hardness
  5. Surface finish and corrosion requirement
  6. Torque or preload requirement
  7. Inspection documents and test reports

For non-standard sizes or special thread lengths, use custom non-standard fasteners.

Final Advice

8.8 bolts are practical for many industrial jobs. 10.9 bolts suit higher-load assemblies. 12.9 bolts should be used where the design truly requires high strength and strict installation control.

A stronger bolt is not always the safer bolt. The right choice depends on the full joint, not the bolt grade alone.

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Industrial Fastening Knowledge · Industry Trends · Technical Insights

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