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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.