Fastener material selection for automotive and new energy vehicle applications is not only a strength question. Buyers also need to think about weight, vibration, corrosion, electrical safety, heat, coating compatibility, and assembly repeatability.
In traditional vehicles, the main focus is often chassis strength, engine vibration, suspension load, and corrosion resistance. In new energy vehicles, the requirements expand. Battery packs, motor housings, aluminum structures, high-voltage components, thermal management systems, and lightweight assemblies all create new fastening challenges.
A good fastener material should match the real working condition, not just the drawing size.
Why Material Selection Matters
Automotive Fasteners Work Under Multiple Risks
A vehicle fastener may face vibration, impact, thermal cycling, road salt, humidity, oil, and repeated maintenance. In new energy vehicles, fasteners may also be used near battery systems, electronic modules, lightweight aluminum parts, and sealed enclosures.
Wrong material selection can lead to:
- Bolt fracture
- Thread stripping
- Galvanic corrosion
- Loose joints
- Sealing failure
- Excessive weight
- Assembly torque instability
- Coating damage during installation
For load-bearing parts, buyers should review high-strength fasteners and confirm grade, testing, and coating before production.
Common Fastener Material Options
Material Comparison for Automotive and NEV Buyers
| Material Type | Common Use | Main Advantage | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon steel | General brackets, covers, low-cost parts | Economical and easy to manufacture | Needs coating for corrosion protection |
| Alloy steel | Chassis, suspension, drive systems, high-load joints | High strength after heat treatment | Requires controlled coating and inspection |
| Stainless steel | Battery covers, wet areas, exposed assemblies | Good corrosion resistance | Usually higher cost and lower strength than some alloy steels |
| Aluminum alloy | Lightweight panels and non-critical assemblies | Low weight | Lower strength and thread wear risk |
| Brass / copper alloy | Electrical or conductive parts | Conductivity and corrosion behavior | Not for high structural loads |
| Special materials | High-temperature or special electrical zones | Application-specific performance | Higher cost and longer lead time |
For general automotive parts, standard fasteners may be enough. For unusual materials, thread forms, or OEM drawings, custom non-standard fasteners are usually required.
Carbon Steel and Alloy Steel Fasteners
Best for Strength-Critical Assemblies
Carbon steel and alloy steel fasteners are widely used in automotive manufacturing because they offer reliable strength, availability, and cost control. Grades such as metric 8.8, 10.9, and 12.9 are common in machinery and vehicle-related assemblies.
Typical applications include:
- Chassis structures
- Suspension brackets
- Seat frames
- Motor mounts
- Battery tray supports
- Heavy equipment vehicle parts
- Structural brackets and frames
Alloy steel fasteners can carry high loads, but they need proper heat treatment, nut matching, washer selection, and tightening control. A stronger bolt does not solve poor joint design.
For corrosion protection, buyers should compare various coated fasteners before selecting zinc plating, zinc flake, phosphate, black oxide, or other finishes.
Stainless Steel Fasteners
Useful Where Corrosion Resistance Matters
Stainless steel fasteners are often selected for exposed areas, battery-related covers, wet zones, and assemblies where corrosion resistance is more important than maximum tensile strength.
Common choices include 304, 316, A2, and A4 stainless steel. In chloride or road-salt environments, 316 or A4 is usually more suitable than 304 or A2.
Buyers can review stainless steel fasteners when corrosion resistance, appearance, and long service life are priorities.
However, stainless steel should not be selected blindly. It can have galling risk during installation, and it may not match the strength of heat-treated alloy steel bolts in high-load joints.
Lightweight Materials in New Energy Vehicles
Aluminum Assemblies Need Careful Fastening
New energy vehicles often use aluminum parts to reduce weight. This creates fastening challenges. Steel bolts in aluminum parts may cause galvanic corrosion if the coating, washer, or isolation method is not handled correctly.
When fastening aluminum structures, check:
- Thread engagement length
- Washer bearing area
- Coating compatibility
- Galvanic corrosion risk
- Torque control
- Reuse and service requirements
Aluminum fasteners can reduce weight, but they are generally not suitable for high-strength structural joints unless the design specifically supports them.
Electrical and Battery-Related Considerations
NEV Fasteners Are Not Only Mechanical Parts
In battery packs, electrical modules, and high-voltage areas, fasteners may need to support insulation, conductivity, grounding, sealing, or corrosion control.
For these areas, buyers should confirm:
- Conductive or non-conductive requirement
- Plating or surface finish
- Magnetic requirement if applicable
- Thermal exposure
- Sealing washer or gasket need
- Cleanliness requirement
- Torque and service access
For complete product planning, buyers can review the full fastener products range.
Common Buyer Mistakes
Avoid Material Selection by Habit
Many problems come from using old automotive fastener habits on new energy vehicle assemblies.
Avoid these mistakes:
- Selecting only by strength grade.
- Using carbon steel without corrosion review.
- Replacing alloy steel with stainless steel without load review.
- Ignoring galvanic corrosion between steel and aluminum.
- Applying the same torque value to different coatings.
- Forgetting nut, washer, and thread compatibility.
- Ordering custom OEM parts without drawings or test requirements.
For washer support under preload, check washer products before confirming the assembly.
RFQ Checklist for Automotive and NEV Fasteners
A clear RFQ should include:
| RFQ Item | What to Specify |
|---|---|
| Application | Chassis, battery pack, motor, bracket, electronics |
| Standard | ISO, DIN, SAE, ASTM, EN, or OEM drawing |
| Material | Carbon steel, alloy steel, stainless steel, aluminum, copper alloy |
| Grade | 8.8, 10.9, 12.9, A2-70, A4-80, SAE grade, or custom |
| Finish | Zinc, zinc flake, phosphate, black, stainless, special coating |
| Assembly | Nut, washer, spacer, sleeve, sealing part |
| Testing | Hardness, tensile, proof load, coating, torque |
| Traceability | Heat number, batch label, MTC, inspection report |
Final Advice
Fastener materials for automotive and new energy vehicle applications should be selected by load, environment, weight, corrosion, electrical function, and assembly method.
Carbon steel and alloy steel remain important for strength. Stainless steel helps with corrosion resistance. Aluminum supports lightweight design in limited applications. Special materials may be needed for electrical, thermal, or battery-related zones.
The safest approach is to define the working condition first, then confirm material, grade, coating, matching parts, test reports, and traceability before production.