The Nose Weight Challenge
![Album image #1 Album image #1](/albums/img/3/7/5/1153375-31781-68-720.jpg)
![Album image #2 Album image #2](/albums/img/3/7/6/1153376-31781-73-720.jpg)
![Album image #3 Album image #3](/albums/img/3/7/7/1153377-31781-22-720.jpg)
![Album image #4 Album image #4](/albums/img/3/7/8/1153378-31781-24-720.jpg)
![Album image #5 Album image #5](/albums/img/3/7/9/1153379-31781-81-720.jpg)
![Album image #6 Album image #6](/albums/img/3/8/0/1153380-31781-70-720.jpg)
![Album image #7 Album image #7](/albums/img/3/8/1/1153381-31781-45-720.jpg)
评论
Album info
This album post was prompted by a comment I read on an album by Jorge Ferriera, "Heinkel He 219", regarding cyano & lead.
I've been happily ballasting with lead fishing weights and cyano since I got back into building, but I was pretty horrified at the comment by Spanjaard, " i hope you didn't use cyano to glue it.... i have heard some really horrible about the reaction of cyano and lead over time"
"OH NO!!!!!" ?
Did a few searches over the last couple of days and this is what I found:
uschivdr.com/product..lexible-nose-weight/
forum.ipmsusa3.org/topic/4448-nose-weights/
cs.finescale.com/fsm..ts/f/2/t/175324.aspx
cs.finescale.com/fsm../p/52343/542868.aspx
Plenty of food for thought, isn't there? No more cyano for me, I'll be using a combination of blu-tac, epoxy and white glue from here on out!!?