I'll be spending my Saturday morning going through this nice list of things to rule out and report back what the problem was. Cheers
Glad to hear is all fixed..!Well I found it to be the pedals themselves. Cleaned all the grit and muck from the threads, greased them and re-installed. 75 miles done at the weekend with not a sound coming from the drivetrain.
I've been mulling over your statement ever since you first posted it. Help me understand your point of view and say why you believe the movement is between axle and bearing inner race rather than between bearing outer race and frame or, a combination of the two.Is it a BB30 bottom bracket? If so the noise is caused by the 30mm alloy axle flexing microscopically inside the inner bearing races. It's not the bearings in the frame as everybody will tell you. Take it all apart and smear bearing fit compound on the machined bands where the axle sits inside the bearing races; that will stop the noise.
I don't recall the discussion a month ago. Your observation and conclusion is spot-on but I don't think it is the case for all BB30s. I haven't seen rouge on the crank axle as in yours, but on the bearing/BB interface. The slip-fit has always produced it for me whereas the crank has usually been so tight I've had to remove it with a mallet. How tight did these cranks fit into the bearings? Was there a definite absence of frame rouge on yours. Obviously if it is a PF BB30 then the question is moot.I though we'd gone over this a month or two ago?
Study this pic of the BB axle and note the areas of wear and pitting where the machined bands are within the bearing inner races. This is within a couple of hundred miles of fitting the BB brand new. When I greased these areas with green grease, the noise re-started a few miles further on and when I disassembled, the grease had turned black, indicating metal wear. When I reassembled with bearing fit compound the noise went away and hasn't recurred in over two thousand miles. Same story with my cycling buddy's FSA BB30 crankset.
Rouge is the term used for traces of metal (black in the case of aluminium) that we see when two metal parts fret against each other. Just like you describe. Frame rouge would be evident where the bearing sits in the frame and crank rouge, as in your case, on the crank.The axle is a pretty snug but easy fit in the bearing races. Tapping with a mallet works but I think the heel of a hand would do it without pain. I smear the bearing fit compound on the axle on the drive side and inside the bearing on the non-drive side so as to give it the best chance of not being wiped off as I insert the axle.
Yes I'm prepared to accept that the bearings also move in the alloy sleeves but in my and my buddy's case with FSA cranks the bearing fit compound has cured the creaks and cracks completely.
Not sure what you mean by frame rouge?
Rouge is the term used for traces of metal (black in the case of aluminium) that we see when two metal parts fret against each other. Just like you describe. Frame rouge would be evident where the bearing sits in the frame and crank rouge, as in your case, on the crank.
One day when you have the crank out and just so happen to have a micrometer in your pocket, measure the crank diameter where the bearing sits. I don't know offhand what the oversize over 30mm should be but I think yours (and many others) may be undersize. It is supposed to sit a bit tighter than what you describe. because we have metal on metal pressfit, the size is critical. On Shimano's metal in plastic, the size is less critical.
I maintain that BB30 is rubbish.