Nope. No idea.
The torque and spec's for the flange will ONLY depend on the pressure, temperature, and service rating of
(1) the flange and (2) the gasket material and
(2)IT'S manufacturer's torque and torque requirements: (pre-stress, intermediate stress at 33%, 66% , 90%, final torque, wait times, hold times before inspection, final gap measurements, etc, etc.
So. Find the maker of the gasket and the conditions of your flange. Call up that manufsctor or look on their website. No material ID -> Get a new rubber gasket that you DO know the requriements.
A gasket is 50.00 - 80.00 dollars. Replacing a blown 72 inch pipe is thousands of dollars, plus millions in shutdown time.