Certificates

Our certifications reflect our commitment to quality, precision manufacturing, and reliable OEM fastener solutions. Every certificate represents our strict standards in production, inspection, and customer service, giving global partners greater confidence in every order.

Certificates & Capabilities

ISO9001 zhengshu1
ISO 9001 Quality Management System
ISO9001 zhengshu2
ISO 9001 Quality Management System2

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Expert Guide to China Fastener Manufacturing Services

Answers to the most common questions from B2B buyers in Germany, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia — compiled by the productionscrews.com team.

Industrial fasteners fall into six main categories: Hex Bolts, Socket Cap Screws, Self-Tapping Screws, Stud Bolts, Nuts, and Washers. Each serves a distinct mechanical purpose, and selecting the wrong type is one of the most common — and costly — sourcing mistakes we see.

Strength grades for carbon steel run 4.8 / 8.8 / 10.9 / 12.9; stainless steel equivalents are A2-70 and A4-80. Grade 12.9 bolts carry a minimum tensile strength of 1,220 MPa — nearly three times that of a standard 4.8 bolt (420 MPa). The right grade depends on load requirements, operating temperature, and corrosion environment, not simply ‘the highest available.’

China is the world’s largest fastener producer, exporting over 3 million metric tons in 2023. Manufacturing is concentrated in Zhejiang (Jiaxing, Haiyan), Shanghai, and Tianjin — regions with fully integrated cold-heading, threading, heat-treatment, and surface-finishing supply chains under one roof.

Compared with equivalent European-made DIN fasteners, all-in procurement costs are typically 30–55% lower. Standard lead times run 7–15 days versus 4–8 weeks from European mills. That said, supplier selection matters enormously. Key checkpoints: valid ISO 9001:2015 certification, in-house or CNAS-accredited lab testing (hardness, tensile, salt spray), and a track record of cooperating with SGS or Bureau Veritas third-party inspection. For German buyers specifically, prioritise factories that can issue a DIN EN 10204 Type 3.1 material test certificate in German.

A precise RFQ (Request for Quotation) requires the following details upfront — missing any of these adds at least 24–48 hours to the quoting process:

① Product specification: standard reference (e.g. DIN 933), size (M8×30), strength grade (8.8), material (carbon steel / stainless);
② Surface finish: zinc plating type (blue-white / yellow / Dacromet), hot-dip galvanizing, black oxide, etc.;
③ Order quantity: per-shipment volume and annual total — both directly affect unit pricing;
④ Target port and trade terms: FOB / CIF / DAP;
⑤ Quality documentation requirements: MTC, SGS inspection, CE declaration, IATF 16949 compliance.

Submit your enquiry via productionscrews.com and the team typically returns a FOB price and lead-time confirmation within 24 hours.

Lead times and MOQs vary significantly by product type:

• Standard DIN/ISO stock items: MOQ 1,000–5,000 pcs; ex-stock 3–7 days, made-to-order 7–15 days;
• Semi-standard items (common spec, non-stock): MOQ 5,000–20,000 pcs; production 15–25 days;
• Custom non-standard parts (tooled from drawing): MOQ from 10,000 pcs; tooling + production 30–45 days; first-article sample approval required;
• Large-diameter / heavy-hex (M30 and above): priced per metric ton, MOQ approx. 1 MT, lead time 25–35 days.

Rush orders are available at a premium of roughly 8–15%. All lead times are calculated from receipt of deposit and confirmed drawings.

Yes — but only with the right supplier and a proper verification process. DIN standards specify tight tolerances on dimensions, mechanical properties (tensile strength, yield strength, impact toughness), coating thickness, and head marking requirements. These are non-negotiable for CE-marked structural assemblies.

A qualified Chinese supplier should be able to: issue a DIN EN 10204 Type 3.1 material certificate; demonstrate full traceability of raw material heat numbers; produce bolts with legible head markings (grade + manufacturer code); and provide test reports from a CNAS-accredited laboratory.

For first-time orders, we strongly recommend commissioning independent third-party testing (SGS or TÜV) covering Vickers hardness, tensile strength, and wedge load tests. Confirm the data against DIN tolerances before scaling volume. The upfront cost is modest; the risk of getting this wrong is not.

For general industrial and construction fasteners, ISO 9001:2015 is the baseline expectation. If you are supplying automotive OEM assemblies, IATF 16949:2016 is mandatory — it layers automotive-specific quality tools on top of ISO 9001, including PPAP, FMEA, MSA, and SPC requirements.For the European market, structural bolting assemblies must comply with EN 14399 or EN 15048 and carry a CE mark. You will also need RoHS 2.0 compliance documentation (restricting lead, cadmium, hexavalent chromium) and a REACH SVHC declaration under EU chemical regulations.Always request the original certification documents with expiry dates — and the most recent external audit report. Certificates that lapsed six months ago are surprisingly common, and discovering that on arrival is an avoidable problem.
Surface treatment is one of the single biggest factors in fastener service life, and it is frequently under-specified by buyers. Here is a practical comparison:• Electroplated zinc (blue-white): salt spray 72–120 hrs; low cost; indoor or low-exposure use only; • Hot-dip galvanising (HDG): zinc layer 45–85 μm; salt spray 500+ hrs; standard for outdoor structural steel and civil construction; • Dacromet: hydrogen-embrittlement-free; salt spray 720–1,000 hrs; the preferred choice for high-strength bolts (Grade 10.9 / 12.9) and automotive underbody parts; • Geomet (Geotrich): hexavalent-chromium-free, RoHS-compliant; a direct environmental alternative to Dacromet increasingly specified by German OEMs; • Mechanical zinc plating: uniform coating, embrittlement-free; suited for spring-loaded components; • Nickel-chrome plating: decorative finish; moderate corrosion resistance.Selection should balance the operating environment (salt, acid, humidity, temperature), bolt strength grade (hydrogen embrittlement risk rises above Grade 10.9 with acid-bath processes), and the customer’s technical specification sheet.
The completeness of your technical package directly determines quote accuracy, sample approval speed, and production defect rates. For non-standard parts, provide:① Engineering drawing (CAD or PDF): all critical dimensions, tolerance grades (IT6 / IT7 / IT8), geometric tolerances (GD&T), and surface roughness (Ra value); ② Material specification: grade designation (e.g. SCM435, 40Cr, SUS316L) or the equivalent DIN / ASTM / JIS standard; ③ Mechanical property targets: tensile strength Rm, yield strength Rp0.2, hardness range (HRC or HV); ④ Surface finish specification: type, minimum coating thickness (μm), salt spray test duration (hours); ⑤ Physical sample (preferred): a reference part reduces interpretation errors more than any amount of documentation; ⑥ Application context: operating temperature, assembly torque requirements, mating materials.The more complete your package, the sharper the quote — and the lower the chance of a costly first-article rejection.
Supply disruption is consistently the top complaint in cross-border B2B fastener sourcing. Several structural measures make a real difference:① Strategic buffer stock: negotiate VMI (Vendor Managed Inventory) arrangements with your factory for high-velocity A-class SKUs — especially those with annual volumes above 100,000 pieces; ② Dual sourcing: maintain two qualified suppliers for any mission-critical specification. Single-source dependency is an unnecessary risk; ③ Production milestone check-ins: set written confirmation points at raw material receipt, in-process inspection, and pre-shipment — not just at despatch; ④ Pre-shipment inspection (PDI): commission SGS or BV to inspect at the factory before container loading. Resolving a defect at origin costs a fraction of what it costs after the goods arrive in Hamburg or Kuala Lumpur; ⑤ Annual framework agreements: buyers with annual spend above USD 50,000 should negotiate a frame contract. Committed customers are prioritised in production scheduling during peak demand quarters (Q2 and Q3).
IP protection is the most frequently raised concern from first-time buyers, and it is entirely manageable with the right contractual and operational measures:① Sign a bilingual (English/Chinese) NDA before sharing any technical drawings. The agreement should clearly define confidential information, permitted use, duration, and financial liability for breach; ② Split the technical information: for complex assemblies, distribute sub-component drawings across multiple suppliers so no single factory holds the complete design; ③ Watermark and number every drawing: include the supplier name and a unique document ID on all shared files — this creates an audit trail if a leak occurs; ④ Register IP in China proactively: file your trademark and design patents with CNIPA (China National Intellectual Property Administration) before production begins. China operates a first-to-file system, so early registration is the most effective protection; ⑤ Tooling ownership clause: contractually specify that all tooling paid for by the buyer is buyer property, and include a competitive supply restriction — preventing the factory from producing your design for third parties.