After brightening the pic, actually looks like 3/16" (correct) down to 1/8", which is thin for the edge.Ron Sommers wrote: It's supposed to be 3/8" thick but the top flexes when pressed down and the edge rises which caused the corner to be 2/8" thick at the curve! Grrrr...
I 'd keep it ... just don't go thinner (ie don't continue the recurve trough) into that area of the upper bout. Fair the adjacent regions to make it look right. (although the binding will thin in that area & be noticeable)Ron Sommers wrote: This will effect the binding I'm sure.
Toss it in the bin and start anew, or make it work?
Fortunately, the spruce is a lot easier to carve, but I'd hate to redo it.
Suggestions?
You could also put veneer on the underside of this region to raise it up a bit.... reflatten the underside & make things a little less noticeable, if you know what I mean.
You weren't wrong ..... as I said above, I go to 1/4", then do most of the outside carving just for that reason, before reducing to 3/16". The difference I think is you carved the inside BEFORE doing the 3/16" edge (and pushing down on the hollowed plate caused the edge to flair up as it went through the router). Although some cupping does happen regardless, due to released tension from the carving ... I see it too. In my case, I route to 3/16" in short sections (4-6") while pressing down with jointer push-pads on either side. Just a technique issue.Ron Sommers wrote: Next time I'll cut the edge thickness 'before' carving! I thought I was being conservative with the edge. I didn't want to ruin it with a plane.