About this detail of the Tiger
The decals for this kit provide two options, representing the same Tiger at different times. Tiger "112" was in action in Tunisia from late 1942 until the end of the African campaign, by which time it was renumbered as "724". Both numbers are on the decal sheet.
The first Tiger unit in Tunisia, s.Pz.Abt.501, is famous for the "stalking tiger" logo on some of its tanks. Rye Field put the logo on this kit's decal sheet and they tell you to apply it on Tiger "724". Here is the relevant note from their instruction sheet.
But in fact there is no evidence that Tiger "724" ever carried the "tiger" logo. This is "724" and we can see nothing painted where Rye Field put the tiger. The photo was taken in El Jem, the place depicted on the kit's box art. We also have photos of this Tiger at the end of its life but we can see no logo there either.
The "stalking tiger" logo was used by the 2nd company and only a few Tigers in the 1st company. All of those Tigers were a later version than any Rye Field kit can build.
The overall colour scheme declared in this kit is unconvincing. We believe that these Tunisian tanks had a 2 colour scheme using RAL8000 and RAL7008. The official German orders say so, there are colour photos supporting it, and those colours were detected on two museum Tigers from Tunisia. But this kit mandates a single overall colour, and it is an aircraft colour, RLM02.
Tigers of this unit had a tiny chassis number painted on the glacis plate. This is something of a sore point for modellers, because the number is visible but in most cases we don't know what it is. However, we do know that Tiger "112" / "724" had the chassis number "250012", which is on the decal sheet. The other decal, "250031", is the number of another Tiger of a visibly different version.