Wrong type of turret
This kit builts a highly detailed turret with full internals. But it's the turret of another vehicle; a Henschel Tiger from the first quarter of 1943. It's not appropriate for the tank "003" built by this kit.
This may be the best rendition of the Henschel Tiger turret on the market today, perhps better than Rye Field's one. It may be possible to use it on various Henschel Tiger model kits.
It would be an interesting challenge to convert this into a true Tiger(P) turret. Some of the contents would have to be guessed at, but we have enough information to make good guesses.
An unwanted turret floor
The Tiger(P), as far as we know, had no circular turret floor. Photos of its wooden mockup show that the upper turret had the same structure as in a Henschel Tiger, e.g. the crossbar and seats. But (like the Panzer III) it had no floor. In fact, when we examine the Henschel Tiger's structure, it becomes clear that its floor was "tacked on" to the existing Tiger(P) design.
It is therefore incorrect for this kit to include a full Henschel-type floor, as it does.
The wrong motor
We don't have full information about the Tiger (P) internals. But we do know for sure that its turret had an electric traverse motor. That motor was very probably attached to the turret ring, at waist height, like the motor in a Panzer IV. But we have no images of the motor and don't know exactly where it was.
This kit includes no electric motor. Instead, we are given the hydraulic motor of a Henschel Tiger, placed down on the floor, with a link for a transmission shaft that this vehicle doesn't even have.
Equipment storage
Amusing Hobby provide equipment storage on the inside walls of the turret. They give it the same layout as Tiger "131" at the Tank Museum. But they may also be imitating kits from other manufacturers, because mistakes made in certain other kits (e.g. missing items, wrong type of ammunition bag) are repeated here. A careful study of the documents and of Tiger "131" would have prevented those mistakes.
We don't actually know if this Tiger(P) turret would have internal storage similar to Henschel Tigers. The two kinds of turret started out different in 1942 and may have gone their separate ways. On the other hand, the turrets were manufactured by the same firms, so it's possible that the same storage bins etc. were used in both of them. Amusing Hobby's storage can't be verified as correct but it is the "best guess".
The intercom
This particular Tiger(P), tactical number "003", was not taken into military service "as is". It was first converted into a Command tank.
Command Tigers had a radio in their turret, but photographs show two antennas on the hull of Tiger "003", so its extra radio must have been put somewhere in there. No major changes, then, were made to the turret.
But surely the tank would have been fitted with the 4-way intercom used by all Command tanks at the time. That intercom was designed specifically for the Command role, allowing the officers to use both radios without leaving their seats. It could be installed without major changes to the tank's wiring.
Amusing Hobby, by copying Tiger "131" (directly or indirectly), have ended up with only the basic turret intercom, not suitable for this vehicle's Command role.
Waterproofing
The Henschel Tiger became increasingly heavy during its design process. At one point, the designers were obliged to add extra wheels to carry its weight. And at another time, realising that the tank was too heavy for many bridges, they added the ability to submerge.
The submersion equipment, including a snorkel, was mostly inside the tank. It was not stored inside boxes and bins, but rather out in plain view.
Amusing Hobby, by copying Tiger "131", have created a turret with visible submersion equipment inside it. The Tiger (P) could not submerge and so we may assume that it would not have carried those items.