Well, turns out I was right-I managed to derail the whole thing... Through a couple of grinding process errors, this knife ended up at a place where I knew I'd never be satisfied with it, regardless of the "fixes" I could do. So, I threw an etch on it just to see and sure enough, one side had the outer layer near the edge and the other up high. I decided to do a little testing and broke the blade in half. On the plus side, the structure looked fairly good-sort of milky in appearance, except for the very outer edges (not entirely certain what that means). I also hacked a bit at my hard resin bench top and found something interesting. I was just having a conversation with someone today about edge geometry. How, depending on the steel, you may nail the heat treat, but if you take it too thin, it just won't hold up. I had an area on the blade that was very thin, though not sharp, and it started to very mildly deform. Towards the heel, it had just a bit more meat left on it and there was no chipping, rolling, etc. and it left big marks on the edge of my bench.
So, while this knife didn't make it to the end, I still learned from it and the next should be better.
Jeremy