Good point on the lube, I did that. I also made myself a fixture for tightening the spokes. I took a piece of old countertop so I had a good flat working surface and drilled a hole to locate the axle in the hub. Then with the spokes still loose I carefully measured the rim to the hub to get it centered and drilled three 1/2" holes, 120 degrees apart outside the rim to put 1/2" wooden dowels to locate the rim. Unfortunately (maybe fortunately) it was a little loose so I wedged cardboard between the dowels and the rim to tweak it around and get it tight and perfectly centered. I put spacers under the rim to center it on the hub axially. Then I went around and tightened each spoke so it just barely bottomed out and then worked my way around a half a turn at a time until they were all tight. On the front wheel the "hop" dialed in at 1mm and the "wobble" at 1.5mm. I tweaked it a bit but I could have just as well left it. I haven't checked the rear one yet. I got the idea for this after touring a Harley-Davidson plant and we timed a woman lacing a wheel in less than 3 minutes on a special fixture that located the hub and rim and was able to spin around like a lazy susan. This included putting on the hub and rim and all the spokes and tightening all the spoke nuts so it was ready to check for trueing and sometimes they didn't even need it. She had a special tool that dispenced and tightened the spoke nuts. Amazing!