Another thing to remember is the amount of heat you get.
Heat up a round bar and hammer all the way around it. If the outer sides of the bar move out/longer like you want, but the center of the bar holds back and you start to create a divot in the center of your bar, then the outer portions are hotter than the inner portions.
I'm not saying this is your problem with your fish lips.
I'm just saying.
Now don't go and overheat your steel because of what I said here.
Jeff, had some great advice and should help to fix your lips.
Everything we do when forging, post forging, grinding, heat treating, building and finishing our knives, etc is dependent upon a myriad of incidental little nuances that are often unique to our style, our chosen steel types, our equipment, our experience level, etc.
And this question about "fish lips" is just one of those little things that plagues us until we overcome them as a result of putting in time in our shop and learning from our mistakes.
Most of the time, there is no simple one-answer remedy to our problems as other makers' methods do not match our own.
One needs to learn what works in HIS shop and put in the time to learn it.