Here's an update: today I took a close look at the areas mentioned in the posts above, but there was clear to me that the dark stuff came from inside the starter.
When I grabbed the aft half of the starter, I could move it ever so slightly in relative to the front half. (this half that is bolted to the egine)
Therefore I took it off the engine, and took it apart along the flange:
The only thing holding it together, where two small bolts. One of them was VERY difficult to remove: it was no way a wrench or a socket with normal thickness would fit since the bolt was VERY close to the starter-body:
Therefore I had to use a small-nosed plier, fiddeling the bolt off:
Inside the starter, I found grease several places:
On a spring and bolt assy:
In a housing:
To me, it looked like the grease had turned thinner in a way, allowing it to seep out of the flange.
Since the aft of the starter was alittle loose from the front half, the flange was not tight. There wasn't any type of sealant beetween the two halves either.
To me, those two small bolts (5 mm?) holding the two halves together, looked VERY small and fragile.
The edge of the two halves had flanges who fitted into eachother, so the torque-forces where absorbed be these formed flanges, but we're talking pretty serious torque here, everytime the starter is engaged.
To me, the construction looked alittle fragile.
Also, I thought it was strange that the starter was bolted to the engine with BOTH startwashers and regular washers on three out of four bolts:
(The starter was installed on the engine by the manufacturer before it was shipped to me)
When you put a regular washer under a starwasher, then the starwasher doesn't have the grab it's supposed to, no??
All this beeing said; it was nice to find to spare share-pins glued to the bottom of the starter:
It was also nice to get a chance to do the procedure necessary if I ever need to change a shear-pin.
It's rather time-consuming, alot of different tools is needed and it's pretty tight space to work in.
Also, the snorkel has to come off to gain access.
I hope I don't have to do this on a small and deserted field during wintertime!
BTW: after seeing how difficult it was to remove one of the small bolts, I grinded down a socket until it fitted on the bolt. Now I can install it and take it off with a socket instead of a pliar...
On Monday, I'll send a mail to Sky Tech asking them about the grease inside the starter. It'd be nice to know what type it shall be, how much and where.
I'll post an update when I get a reply from them.