Karl, I don't think this green paint is anything different than good ol' RAL 6003, it's just that it's appearance is possibly different. Possibly a poor dilution ratio, mixed with other paint, another paint was substituted, bad photography, we just don't know. It's just that some people, myself included, think it looks different. Others have commented that they see an odd-looking concrete grey shade of Dunkelgelb on the JT and no real yellow at all, others see black paint here too. I don't know what the grey is, burned something else, zinc phosphate, a grungy-grey shade of Dunkelgelb, who knows? For years it has been stated that there was only one Dunkelgelb, and yet we now know this is not true. We probably can never know exactly what happend in the chaos of the closing stages of the war. Perhaps this is a fluke, we really don't have enough evidence to make any sort of definitive judgement. I'm sort of playing devil's advocate here and bringing some of the more obscure aspects of this topic to the light of day, just for purposes of discussion.
I know I was unaware of the order that Mr Doyle presented concerning the paint schemes found on these vehicles. Sure, everyone by now has heard of the statements made by Mr Jentz which gave rise to the whole exposed red primer being visible, but how many folks has seen it spelled out in this fashion;
"In September 1944 assembly firms were ordered to paint camouflage patterns on vehicles prior to delivery. A later instruction was to paint vehicles in a thin coat of Grundierfarbe Rot RAL 8012 (Red primer undercoat) and then to apply well-thinned stripes and patches, with sharp outlines, of Dunkelgelb RAL 7028 and Gruen RAL 6003 over approximately 50% of the surface." (italics mine). Mr Doyle continues with the addition of white paint to the scheme. Not to blow my own horn, but I have nearly 500 books on German armor and WWII, not one of them states the use of white paint on exterior surfaces. White-wash, sure, but not white paint. Some folks even talk of exterior Elfenbein being used....Prominent, well-respected experts in the field folks...
These red/yellow/white and +/- green vehicles that I just posted are still considered heresy by a great number of people in this hobby.
While I agree that this whole lime green craze lacks substantial evidence, I think we should remain open to the idea that stranger things have happened. Look at the fact that we didn't even know the Leibermuster camo uniforms were actually issued until photos surfaced a couple of years ago. One more oddity I'll throw in, take a look at this 4-toned Grille, what is the fourth color?
Thanks for taking the time to respond to my rant. It's really just an exercise in speculation. Like I said, you won't see my panzers in Key Lime pie any time soon.