Advice welcome.
Aluminium seat post in steel or aluminium frame = grease.
Carbon seat post in carbon frame = no grease (someone said talc instead or some proprietory stuff).
Aluminium seat post in carbon frame = ????
Discuss.
Seat posts - grease or......
Moderator: Moderators
No idea. You don't have 2 metals in contact so no anode/cathode issues (carbon fibre isn't conductive AFAIK). If there's any risk of it getting stuck though a smear of grease might be advisable - assuming the grease in question isn't corrosive to carbon. If it does tend to slip - which I'd doubt - then simply wipe clean.
I'm sure someone knows the proper answer!
I'm sure someone knows the proper answer!
Carefully! Don't whale away with a long allen key. It's a fine line between tight enough to hold and crushing the seat post. Not that I've ever deformed a carbon seatpost, oh no 
I now use one of these:
http://www.parker-international.co.uk/P ... f18b567c74
and do up to 4 nm.

I now use one of these:
http://www.parker-international.co.uk/P ... f18b567c74
and do up to 4 nm.
Came across this whilst idly browsing:
http://www.velonews.com/tech/report/art ... 799.0.html
Different scenarios but it seems that in any event the use of carbon assembly paste/grease is the 'Gold Standard' to prevent seizing. Not sure about slippage but the torque wrench must be the best way to avoid overtightening.
http://www.velonews.com/tech/report/art ... 799.0.html
Different scenarios but it seems that in any event the use of carbon assembly paste/grease is the 'Gold Standard' to prevent seizing. Not sure about slippage but the torque wrench must be the best way to avoid overtightening.