Fasteners look simple, but wrong selection can stop an assembly line, delay a project, or create safety risks. In industrial purchasing, the problem is rarely that buyers ignore quality. More often, the RFQ is incomplete, the application is not clearly described, or one “small” detail is assumed instead of confirmed.
Good fastener selection starts with a simple rule: never buy by size alone.
Mistake 1: Specifying Only Diameter and Length
Size Is Not a Full Specification
“M16 × 80 bolt” is not enough for industrial purchasing. It does not define the standard, thread pitch, grade, coating, thread length, head style, nut grade, or washer requirement.
| Missing Detail | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Standard | Controls dimensions and product form |
| Grade | Defines mechanical strength level |
| Thread pitch | Affects nut compatibility |
| Thread length | Controls assembly and clamp range |
| Coating | Affects corrosion resistance and thread fit |
| Nut and washer | Determines full joint performance |
For common items, buyers should compare standard fasteners before confirming the RFQ.
Mistake 2: Choosing Grade Without Application Review
A higher grade is not always the safest choice. Class 10.9 or 12.9 bolts may need better tightening control, matching nuts, hardened washers, and suitable coating.
For machinery, steel structures, and load-bearing assemblies, review high-strength fasteners and confirm the real load condition before upgrading grade.
Mistake 3: Ignoring the Working Environment
Fasteners used indoors, outdoors, underground, offshore, or in chemical plants face different risks. A zinc plated bolt may work well in dry indoor equipment but fail quickly in humid or marine conditions.
Check:
- Moisture and salt exposure
- Temperature range
- Vibration or impact
- Chemical contact
- Maintenance frequency
- Coating life requirement
For corrosion-related projects, compare various coated fasteners or stainless steel fasteners.
Mistake 4: Treating Bolts, Nuts and Washers Separately
A bolted joint works as a system. A strong bolt with a weak nut can still fail. A soft washer under high preload can reduce clamp force after tightening.
Buyers should confirm bolt grade, nut grade, washer hardness, thread fit, and coating compatibility together. For washer selection, review washer products.
Mistake 5: Not Providing Drawings for Non-Standard Parts
Photos are useful, but they cannot replace drawings. Custom fasteners need clear dimensions, tolerances, material, heat treatment, coating, and inspection points.
For special heads, long threads, bent bolts, anchor rods, or OEM parts, use custom non-standard fasteners and confirm drawings before production.
Buyer Checklist Before Ordering
A complete RFQ should include:
- Product type and standard
- Size, pitch, and thread length
- Material and grade
- Surface finish
- Nut and washer matching
- Application environment
- Inspection and certificate requirements
- Packaging and labeling details
Final Advice
Most fastener selection mistakes are preventable. Define the full assembly, not just the part name. Confirm the standard, grade, thread, coating, working condition, matching parts, and documents before production.
For broader sourcing, buyers can review the full fastener products range and build a clearer purchasing specification from the start.