You probably aren't going to see it too much under the fuel injection intake manifold anyway. I'm really just doing it to be different, got to have a little WTF?! in your life, right? I'm also planning to put the turbo exhaust forward, and run my "downpipe" around the front so I can do my passenger side WWII fighter plane style exhaust in the fender.
As for the reference I promised earlier from Skunkworks: page 202-204 describes the design team getting around the challenges of choosing materials to build the blackbird out of. Ben Rich (then a designer on the project) determined that painting the plane black would lower wing temperatures by 35 degrees which would allow them to use the lower grade titanium that was available at the time without having to worry about it losing strength from the heat. The impetus for this decision was the fact that the only supplier in the US that was milling sheets of titanium didn't have much in the way of quality control, and lowering the temperature gave them a buffer. According to Ben Rich, the only factor in using black paint was heat control, prior to that it was going to be polished. The radar absorbency was a side effect, but because it worked so well it made the transition to the F-117 program. However, later in the book, it is made very clear that the majority of the stealth capability of that plane was the shape of the fuselage, and only to an extremely lesser degree to the absorbency of the ferrous paint.