Gene,
I always remove the heat sinks and take a flat file to the transistor seating surfaces. If it is flat, the file just glides on the dark anodizing. If there is a high spot from a defect or a dent where some goofball dropped something onto the soft aluminum surface; it shows up. Then I chamfer each hole that a Sil-Pad would be touching, and never re-use a Sil-Pad, they are not very expensive.
I have had several heat sinks with high spots that were likely burn-through pits and craters, these would likely have pushed through a Sil-Pad. I resisted Sil-Pads for a long time because I was a Mica and Grease man. Eventually, Joe convinced me about the time-saving qualities of the Sil-Pads, but nothing will push through a sheet of mica.
And, I torque each screw to 7 inch-pounds with a calibrated torque screwdriver. I have not since had any problems with my flattened, chamfered heat sinks and Sil-Pad interfaces.