The clamping force of a locknut can vary widely based on the shaft and locknut thread condition and lubrication applied. Back in the mid 80s the railways brought a problem
of fretting wear on the radius from the bearing seat diameter up to the wheel seat diameter to the bearing manufacturers. At the back of the bearing there is a fillet ring with a radius equal to the axle radius. The double row taper roller bearing has a spacer between the cones that provides a set clearance in the bearing. The testing program found some curious variations in clamping force when the three blots in the end of the axle were torqued to the specs with new wrenchs and regular verification during the program.
We then tested with bolts provided by the Railway shops as they would have cleaned them and applied them to the rebuilt axles. The clamping force values varied enough to cause concern. We then removed the bearings from the test axles, and reassemble and tested the same bearings but the bolts had been immersed in oil prior to installation the clamping force averaged 65% greater with the same torque measurement. The shops now oil all bolts.
Angular contact bearings are supplied as "Universaly ground spec" which means they can be paired face to face, back to back or in tandem. However, these paired bearings are supplied with axial clearance, zero clearance, light preload, medium preload and heavy preload which is stated in the suffix marked on the bearing.
If you mount a pair with medium preload in back to back arrangement, when positioned on the shaft by normal heating and shrink fit assembly, there will be clearance between the inner side faces of the bearings. When the lubricated locknut is tightened with a torque wrench, there should be a rise in the reading and then a sharp drop as outboard ring shifts and the two rings come together. The nut is now tightened till the torque value is reached.