QUOTE: Originally posted by IronBrigade
i painted the deck wood color just to bring out more detail.i am thinking about going over the flight deck with a very watered down gunship grey color..i think the flight deck was made of wood, like our US carriers were..here are some pics of someone else who built this carrier
http://www.german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/ships/carrier/grafzeppelin/scale.html
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Of all the details describing the deck I've found it never refers to wood anywhere, just a straight metal deck. Not that I really care, since it never atually got built. And the kit instructions call for it to be the darker gray color, I forget what they call it, but anyways, it's the same color used for the stern and bow plates deck surface.
At this site it says the Flight Deck was 1.9 centimeter armor, converted that's roughly 3/4 inch armor. I've never found any reference to the Graf having a wooden flight deck, and that site you linked me to, only has one image with a wood colored deck, the rest are armor/steel gray. Not trying to rain on your parade or anything, but the Germans got design ideas from the Japanese before beginning construction on the Graf.
http://www.geocities.com/pentagon/2833/kriegsmarine/carrier/grafzeppelin/grafzeppelindata.html
With further research, the Graf Zeppelin was a fleet carrier, and every fleet carrier design I can find refers to armored flight decks, now the escort and auxiliary carriers might have had wooden decks, but All I know is what I've seen and read. Upon further research yes the Essex class carriers had an unarmored wooden deck, but from what I can see/understand they were the exception of carrier design, from what I can see the British, French, and Japanese all used straight steel decks.
The last thing I have to say is that since the ship was never actually completed, and it's your model, do whatever you like with it.