OH DEAR, i have just converted from no grease to grease
now i was always an impressionable fence jumper
but having read this
http://206.75.155.18/kmr/crankbb.html
and this
http://206.75.155.18/kmr/bbcreak.html
i fear he is right
in particular this
The reason to lube the tapers is to prevent galling and fretting from occurring
during installation. Basically, what this IS is that while the machined tapers
of the Ti (or CrMo) spindle appear smooth to the naked eye or to the touch of your
fingers, when viewed under high magnifaction (like 1000x), they are actually
quite rough with peaks and valleys and sharp edges. When you're pressing the cranks on,
which are almost always aluminium and softer than the Titanium spindle,
the BB tapers are acting like minature files and removing small flakes
of aluminium from the crank tapers. These flakes then become trapped between
the crank & BB tapers, leading to an imperfect press-fit and are the MAIN source
of creaking noises.
For many decades, there has been an old wives tale unique to the bicycle
industry about greasing the spindle tapers being a major no-no and sure fire way
to over-install the cranks. This is a myth, pure and simple. Its only now that
crank & BB makers are doing their own R&D and correcting their manuals and
informing consumers and bike mechanics to lubricate the tapers. RaceFace manuals
state to do this now when originally they said not to do it, Shimano's master
bible for installing their parts say to do it (and they even ship the BB spindles now with
grease on the tapers already, ready to install), and the latest edition of the
Sutherlands manual says to lube the tapers.
You clean the tapers before applying the grease to remove any aluminum particles
that were removed from the crank tapers and have become trapped in place as the
cranks are installed. You use the grease (or anti-seize, either works, I use
a waterproof marine grease myself) to prevent galling and fretting when the
crankarms are installed (this is what causes the aluminum flakes to break off).
Contrary to popular belief, the crank/bb assembly of a bike is NOT a
friction-fit, nor is it really a press-fit... it is an INTERFERENCE-fit. What's
holding the cranks on is the plastic deformation of the metals involved. The
softer metal will deform around the harder metal (ever so slightly), and in
concert with the crank bolts, this holds the crankarm in place (once sufficient
deformation has taken place). It is NOT dependant on friction, nor will the
presence of grease prevent this deformation from taking place. The presence of
small particles of aluminum that were ground off the tapers by the galling and
fretting which occured from excessive friction during the installation process
(say, from a dry-fit assembly) however, can lead to an improper interference-fit
and the symptom of this, is the dreaded creaking whenever torque is applied to
the cranks.
This is galling & fretting is MORE likely to occur with BB spindles (Ti or CrMo)
which are machined rather than forged. MOST CrMo spindles are forged, because
its cheaper for the big companies (like shimano) to make MANY identical parts
this way. In the case of Ti BBs (and some aftermarket CrMo BBs), the spindles
are machined, which leaves a rougher surface on the tapers than forging. This
rough surface, which may appear smooth to your fingertips, is actually quite
abrasive to the aluminum tapers of your typical crankarm. If there's too much
friction when you install the aluminum cranks, galling & fretting occurs and
tiny pieces (usually too small to see with the naked eye) break off and become
trapped in places where you don't want them...
Any other questions?!?
So TKO or RSC i think