Late to the party again... but I am going to post anyway because this boils my blood!
You cannot find any information about live loading and/or hot bolting of bolted flanges from us gasket manufacturers because it is something YOU SHOULD 100% AVOID.
Here you are at 120°C and I assume with an #900 RTJ joint you have quite a high pressure (perhaps even a nasty chemical?)...so if the gasket and/or flange blows out with a PERSON stood next to it. I hope you as the engineer like jail time and if you're the installer....you need to look on the dark places of the internet for pictures and videos of what the remains of a person looks like after something bad happens.
"but the company! MONEY!... impossible!...blah blah blah..." You are an engineer not a marketing executive, do the job the right way.
Then the answer is easy, while not live, do the 4 pass again at the same torque. If the bolts don't move then you'll need to look into increasing the bolt load. (Either due to insufficient initial load or the dried up lubricant) TALK TO YOUR GASKET MANUFACTURER FIRST not a random forum on the internet.
Engineering is all about the details, which this thread is dangerously lacking.
RTJ gaskets work because they are a softer material than the flange materials. You want the RTJ to deform not the flange face.
So has anybody asked why is the initial recommended installation bolt load low ? an error ? or is it by design to prevent the flange faces cracking?
So what are the flange and gasket materials/types ? Perhaps it is a lower load designed RTJ with facings ? these also have a lower maximum load capability....
We also have no idea of the media or internal pressures, no idea if the end thrust has been accounted for.. no idea if any local regulations apply.. no idea about the initial calculations, no idea about any ancillary connection influences, no idea of the condition of the flange facings, no idea if the installer knows what a washer is and no idea how the bolt load was applied... so we really don't have anywhere enough info to give out any advise.
So TALK TO YOUR GASKET MANUFACTURER! They will ask all these questions for very good reasons. If they don't... then change your gasket manufacturer
