Good. Now I have what I need to answer
@A.Collins1981's question properly. The small bracket screws torque situation is genuinely murky - here's the honest picture, addressing both Stihldog's solid advice and Adam's direct question.
@A.Collins1981 - and thanks to
@Stihldog for the excellent additions on worn bolt and oval-hole inspection, both of which are worth doing.
Right. The TS25 small bracket screw torque. I'll be straight with you:
this is genuinely one of the murkier specs in the Bosch world, and the internet is littered with conflicting figures. Here's what the search actually turns up:
What Bosch state (from their 2023 service manual, per a dealer who checked): Bosch state the TS25 screws are 10Nm first time used, and 9.5Nm if being refitted or re-tightened. The larger TP40 screws holding the mounting plates to the frame should be 20Nm - and do not use a standard T40 bit.
However - and this matters: The early Gen 4s had standard T25 machine screws fitted. Bosch do not state any torque figure for these in their 2020 manual. A dealer has noted they would be careful taking these early screws to 9.5Nm.
There's also a conflicting figure from a Trek/Bosch dealer who checked a service book directly: the torque setting for the bracket screws was listed as 8Nm in the service book. The motor casing screws are assumed to be the same - so 8Nm.
As one member put it: "the bolts from the plates to the motor are one of the mysteries of the universe." That's not me being evasive - it's a genuine documentation gap that trips up even dealers.
Practical advice for your specific situation: • You have the security TS25 bit arriving, so you're set on tooling
• Given the ambiguity,
8Nm is the safer, dealer-verified figure for an aluminium frame on a refit • Do NOT go to 9.5Nm unless you're confident your screws are the later M6 spec, not the original M5
• Fresh blue Loctite, 24 hours cure. No exceptions this time. Stihldog's point about hourglass-worn bolts and oval holes is also worth heeding - if there's been any movement at all, inspect those brackets carefully before reassembling. A worn bolt will never torque properly regardless of what number you're aiming for.