Umm... It is a mystery why.silverback wrote: ↑Tue Feb 26, 2019 2:09 pm ...I have never seen a spec that reads "reduce torque by 30% when threads are lubricated." Never. Not once...
CAUTION -- Thread drift below, read at your personal risk
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To come at the problem a different direction, instead of torque values, talk about clamping force and not bolts in shear. Dry bolts in dry threads have a higher friction than lubricated bolts, the shoulder area of the bolt head adds more friction (where the wild card is washers of various material types). If there is any oxidation there is even higher friction. Using a torque wrench and a pressure gauge between two plates being clamped, torque a dry bolt to a specific value, say 50 lb/ft and read the pressure between the two plates. Repeat using a lubricated bolt. Note the clamping pressure difference. There are many tables which show torquing compensation based on different lubricants such as graphite, oil, grease as well as plating material. Anti-seize can contain Teflon, graphite and many types of fine metallic particles.
This table is just an example of dry vs. lubricated bolts, there are better and more comprehensive tables provided by anti-seize manufacturers.