That is one fine looking flattop scott.
Here is my entry for the GB:
The kit is ok for its age and has good exterior details. The interior needs a lot of work and is not as accurate as the Hasegawa Kate which is reported to have an excellent and accurate cockpit.
This Nichimo pit is partially there but lacking several details that need to be scratched out to make it look close.
I assembled the cowling and used the UMM saw to trim the vents so they could be partially open. I also sanded them from the inside to thin them and drilled out the exhaust pipes. I was gonna use some aluminum tubing instead but these plastic pipes are really well done.
Cowl vents thinned, trimmed and partially opened:
This is the scheme I plan to model from the Shokaku but with a torpedo
My thanks to Gary (Devil Dawg) for having his daughter in law translate the Japanese writing on the Nichimo sheet for me.
This is another can of worms because the Kate schemes, specially this one I found as built models with the lighter color being NMF, light grey or a pale green. I read somewhere that all Kates where painted at the Nakajima factory in a color called Nakajima Amber Grey or Ameiro or Ame-Iro or caramel color? The Kates were then painted by the individual units in the field. I have been looking for this info and unfortunately did not bookmark it.
I have a sneaking suspicion that the lighter color is in fact the Ame-Iro (light caramel color) over sprayed with the darker Nakajima green. Unfortunately, out of over 1,200 Kates built, none survived intact so who knows what's what with the colors. I also saw a picture of a Kate salvaged wreck with what appeared to be red oxide primer on the wing sheet metal.
I ordered the Nakajima colors by WEM so they are in the mail. Again, I saw a kate painted this way and failed to bookmark it too. WEM is reported to have a close match to these colors.
Not the same unit I will be doing but the Ame Iro color is mentioned and used.
http://www.hyperscale.com/features/2001/kateir_1.htm