8.8 is a safe bet which is roughly equivalent to SAE Grade 5. For basic fastening SAE Grade 2 is most common with Grade 5 coming next which translates to metric 5.6 and 8.8 (Roughly...).
Anything below 8.8 in metric is often not marked.
To get a perspective, Grade 8 bolts are usually for stuff like automotive flywheels and torque converters with hundreds of horsepower behind it. You'll find Grade 5 for the bolts in small hydraulic press assemblies. Grade 2 is the typical zinc plated stuff found at the hardware store.
Ray
Anything below 8.8 in metric is often not marked.
To get a perspective, Grade 8 bolts are usually for stuff like automotive flywheels and torque converters with hundreds of horsepower behind it. You'll find Grade 5 for the bolts in small hydraulic press assemblies. Grade 2 is the typical zinc plated stuff found at the hardware store.
Ray
Ah, I may not have been clear. Perhaps I'm using the wrong nomenclature. I was curious what grade (quality/strength) you were purchasing your metric nuts, bolts, and screws at. The Wikipedia page for hardware (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screw#Machine_screws under the "Metric" header) says that metric goes from 4.6 to 12.9. Metric 12.9 ~= SAE grade 8.