> The balls, which had Russian markings, were used to pressurise fuel tanks or as stabilisation jets, the report states.<p>Spent a bit of time in the metal trade, sometimes various metals that can best be described as oddities from Sheffield would be heading south, one such time some metal pieces were on this lorry no bigger than a chunk of cheese or hash brown thats broken off, clearly its been part of a larger plate of metal, but its magnetic strength was so strong it needed a screw driver to leverage it off anything it was stuck to. Never seen anything as strong magnetically since, but it had became a sort of competition with people/visitors asked to try to pull it off what other metal it was stuck to.<p>> 20 kilogram, titanium sphere,
> It is not something you would sell to a scrap dealer,'' he said.<p>The titanium being sold as scrap would come down in bars which had been angle-grinded all over to produce long metal splinters so that it could only be handled with a fork lift, the splinters would go through gloves if you tried to handle it. That shows to what lengths some scrap metals were "processed" in order to avoid being stolen.