I know this is an old thread, but there were a couple mentions of using lubrication which I'm curious about.
It was my understanding that a fairly significant amount of the torque applied to a fastener went towards overcoming friction, so when you lubricate the fastener and use the same amount of torque, you get much more bolt loading. When the torque you're applying is to keep a fastener from backing out (and you're not on the verge of fastener failure) then you use the same amount of torque, wet or dry, as the lubrication affects loosening just like tightening. All you care about is how much torque it takes to get the fastener to move.
For rifle scope rings, the torque isn't (just) to keep the fastener secure, it's to provide the appropriate amount of clamping force on the scope tube to keep it from slipping under recoil while not deforming the tube. In this case, lubricating the ring screws and using the same amount of torque applies more clamping force then the manufacturer's specified (dry) torque setting. So use caution when lubricating scope fasteners.
Do I have this wrong? I'm no mechanical engineer.