Couple things:
1 - Re: the P&D site - Phil said they were doing a server upgrade/installation, which now seems complete. Hence the two-day 'hiatus.'
2 - NICE RIG.
As a fellow Kimber owner, PLEASE FOLLOW THIS ADVICE:
On your first range trip, bring everything you need to disassemble the slide (i.e. the bushing wrench that came with the pistol, and a small punch to remove the firing pin retaining plate). This will allow you to get to the extractor and tune the tension.
When I got my Kimber SIS (which I now love, btw), I had to do the following to turn it into a reliable pistol:
1 - Polish and round the barrel throat/feed ramp;
2 - Contour and polish the extractor;
3 - Lighten the extractor tension
Now, at your first test-firing, you can adjust the extractor tension if you bring tools to disassemble the slide - if the pistol works fine "as is" then you're laughing, but if not you'll be crying. A quick extractor tension adjustment (by reversing the extractor in its hole and bending it whichever way it needs to go) may make the difference between an awesome first range trip and going home cursing a blue streak.
Trust me, there is nothing worse than drooling over your new Kimber and having the thing fail to feed again... and again... and again...
I wish you better luck than I had! Hopefully you didn't get one of the "Monday morning" or "Friday afternoon" pistols I seemed to...
And, FWIW, the CDPII is apparently one of Kimber's most reliable "box" pistols - so I hope you don't go through what I did with my SIS.
-M