Safety note: These tables are approximations, use at your own risk! In things like wheels, brakes, steering parts, suspension, pressure joints, lifting rigging, structural connections, etc., get the OEM spec or look for an engineered tightening procedure for those parts.

TL;DR – Torque specs are so important precisely because they’re a practical way to achieve the right clamp load (preload) in a bolted joint; apply too little torque and it might loosen over time, too much torque could stretch, gall, or strip parts. Torque is an indirect measurement – you throw almost all your wrench effort into overcoming friction between threads, and under a nut or under the bolt head inside the cup. Therefore noticeably changes may be caused for example by lubrication, threading, cad plating, surface finish, etc. If you don’t have an OEM spec, only use a torque chart as a starting point; standardize your process where possible (same lube, same washer, same tool, same torqueing method). Ranges are provided below for typical heating and cooling values for coarse-thread SAE Grade 5/Grade 8 fasteners, practical Property Class tables of similar typical range for metric.

What a torque spec is really trying to do! It’s a target tightening torque (for example, “tighten this bolt to 80 ft-lb”) sought for a given bolt tension (or preload in fastening parlance) and thence a desired clamp load across the joint. Clamp load is that force keeping things from sliding around, things subject to vibration from vibrating loose, leaks from leaking, things under separate service loads from separating, etc. A common rule of thumb for equating tightening torque to bolt tension is T = K × F × d, where T is torque, F is the desired axial load (bolt tension), d is bolt diameter, and K is a “torque coefficient” lumping together the effects of all relevant friction. NASA’s Fastener Design Manual states that K is frequently taken as 0.2, but warns that this value “must not be applied indiscriminately…it is felt that a realistic value lies somewhere between 0.10 and the common value of 0.2” for steel to steel depending on friction conditions.

Key takeaway: torque is not the goal—clamp load is the goal. Torque is just a convenient way to aim for it when you can’t directly measure bolt stretch, or tension.

Why torque specs matter (what can go wrong)

What changes torque requirements (even for the “same” bolt)

Real-world limitation: torque charts can be “right” and still produce the wrong clamp load for your joint because friction varies so much. Portland Bolt explicitly cautions that torque values are estimates and that torque alone can’t guarantee proper bolt tension; they recommend treating charts as a guide and validating under actual joint/assembly conditions when accuracy matters.

Quick identification: common SAE bolt grades (so you don’t use the wrong chart)

For inch-series (SAE) fasteners, bolt head markings are often the fastest clue. Portland Bolt notes that SAE J429 head markings commonly include 3 radial lines for Grade 5 and 6 radial lines for Grade 8 (Grade 2 typically has no radial lines). Note: studs/fully threaded rods don’t always have the same marking requirements as headed bolts, so don’t assume you can always identify grade by looking at an unmarked rod.

Common torque ranges (use as a starting point, not a guarantee)

About the ranges below: The SAE ranges are based on a published table that presumes msgibbons bolts; that source says to increase torque about 30% for dry bolts. Your actual required torque may vary for a number of reasons, such as joint design, type and amount of lubrication, and finish.

SAE (inch) coarse-thread torque ranges (ft-lb): Grade 5 vs Grade 8

Typical starting ranges for clean threads (coarse/UNC). Lower end ≈ lightly oiled; upper end ≈ “dry” estimate (about +30%).
Bolt size (UNC coarse) Grade 5 (ft-lb, approx range) Grade 8 (ft-lb, approx range)
1/4-20 6–8 9–12
5/16-18 13–17 18–23
3/8-16 23–30 33–43
7/16-14 37–48 52–68
1/2-13 57–74 80–104
9/16-12 82–107 115–150
5/8-11 112–146 159–207
3/4-10 200–260 282–367
7/8-9 322–419 454–590
1-8 483–628 682–887

Metric coarse-thread maximum tightening torques (starting point)

If you’re working with metric bolts and no OEM spec, you’ll often find listed in published tables “recommended maximum” torques for coarse threads in lightly lubricated conditions, allowing you to establish starting points. The values below are common reference points for property class 8.8 and 10.9.

Imperial coarse threads: typical recommended maximum tightening torque (ft-lb) with approximate metric conversions in parentheses.
Bolt size Class 8.8 (ft-lb / N·m) Class 10.9 (ft-lb / N·m)
M6 11.8 / 13.5 17.0 / 20.7
M8 28.8 / 38.7 41.3 / 56.0
M10 57.3 / 77.5 81.8 / 110.0
M12 99.8 / 135.4 143 / 180.4
M16 248 / 385.8 354 / 400.0

Read this with caution: you may be dead on or it could total your motorcycle if you mess it up. Attempt to understand what torque in real life applies to your situation (and therefore what to do on your motorcycle).

“Very few motorcycle bolts should be tightened to a maximum, and even fewer that use a Loctite or anti-seize lubrication on them!”

Torque wrench basics that affect accuracy

Calibration and verification (how to trust your tool)

Common Misfires

Other ways to check you’re using the right torque spec

  1. Try to find an OEM or service manual spec. This is the best way.
  2. Double-check TTY or not, and whether the spec is torque-only (or torque only), torque + angle, TTY, etc. Be sure you’re using the right method.
  3. Check the spec against fastener grade/class by the marking if the fastener has any (and remember that many studs/rods are not burdened with marking).
  4. Use the proper mating condition: dry vs oiled or threadlocker vs anti-seize; plated vs plain; washer vs no washer.
  5. If it’s time critical, double-check that it’ll achieve the right clamp load another way (using DTI washers, or stretch measuring/using a tensioner, or test the procedure).

FAQ

Is the torque chart wrong if my utopia says so?
Not automatically—different assumptions (dry vs lubricated), probably different consequent clamp load target, perhaps different pitch, and probably different fastener grade may be hiding in the numbers. Given a vehicle and other equipment, it’s probably best to trust the service manual spec.
Can I hammer my impact and “finish with a torque wrench”?
Kind of, but don’t make that your go-to strategy. An impact can overshoot. The impact can also introduce inconsistent friction/settling that will throw the final torque out as the impact settles down. If you’re going to use it, just use it for snugging where the fastener ought to have adequate clamp load, then do final torque in stages with a wrench.
Do I have to oil the thread to be more accurate?
If there’s a pretty narrow range of likely final clamped load, oiling will make your final torque much more repeatable from attempt to attempt. But it also raises the effective torque applied. You don’t need to oil if it’s not specified, or if you’re just using a specially-engineered torque value for that ‘oil’.
What grade is my bolt, and why is that important?
More important than whatever number is displayed on the side of the bolt head. Grade is about the maximum clamp load (force or tension) a given diameter of a bolt can handle before stretching or breaking. Higher grade bolts can take greater tensions before the material yield point, but the material where the joint will clamp, and the joint design, sets the limit, not the bolt grade.

For that reason, in situations where the acting material is not a stellar harder material, i.e., some softer aluminum castings, a fancier stronger bolt will make torqueing aggressively strip threads in fasteners and/or parts with normal or moderate torqueing, as soon as the rod bolts or head bolts even, thereafter.
How often do I recalibrate my torque wrench?
It entirely depends of course, on how critical the work is, and on the tools used and stored. With no other control procedure indicated, common guidance I reference from some of the torque tool manufacturers is 12 months or 5,000 cycles as a general “floor”-strip-n-bolt setting—they might not agree, but I’d suggest that if doing much work calibrating torque and firing it, you need shorter intervals to remain mindful and not sloppy. If afterward you just blast it, a shorter term will do you well. Could be monthly. Monthly might most do. 5,000 cycles is only good for starry-eyed shows. Pls don’t point that wrench at me.

References

  1. NASA Reference Publication 1228: Fastener Design Manual (the relevant torque formula and the discussion about torque coefficient)
  2. Engineering ToolBox: U.S. Bolts – Tightening Torques
  3. Engineering ToolBox, Metric bolts – maximum recommended tightening torque
  4. Portland Bolt: Bolt Torque Chart
  5. Portland Bolt: Let’s decode those fastener head markings
  6. Norbar: Related question, How often should I recali my torque wrench?

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