Your form should work fine a wee bit narrow… when I built plywood forms like that, the first thing I did was used epoxy and glued an edge band into the shape of the form with a couple 1/8” pieces of hardwood. Either red oak or maple. I liked to use a heavier edge band on the bottom too, to help keep it straight, or simply screw a piece of angle iron to my one piece forms.
After the form was completed I seal the whole form with shellac or an economical brushing lacquer.(This part is important)
But…. With the quality of 3/4” plywood these days, and expense…. I have replaced most of my forms, and built newer forms with LVL material and did not sand them for thickness at all. I leave the factory sealer on them and keep the thickness at 1.75” , even for my 1.5” longbow forms. I’ve had real good luck with these staying straight, with no twist for years now.
Many years ago I quit using a hot box and prefer a heat strip curing method. This added further longevity to my forms not being cooked again and again, and I don’t have to muscle those heavy one piece forms in and out of a box either. When I found out about the battery charger heat strip method, it required purchasing stainless steel pressure strips that are longer than the form and I can attach the charger clamps too.
Prior to using this system I used aluminum pressure strips, and they seemed to work well until getting a lot of epoxy on them, and needing to sand them smooth again. I found that the aluminum is pretty soft and can easily be deformed by sanding without notice and found slight imperfections in the glass after lay up.
When I upgraded to stainless steel pressure strips / heat strips this eliminated that problem. They are much easier to sand smooth without ant deformation. So even if you are going to use a hot box or no heat at all, I would highly recommended the 303 stainless in an 18 gage over aluminum.
Another little trick that evolved with years of experience, is getting rid of side washers or tabs on the edge of my forms, and using heavy zip ties to hold your lams straight in the form. You just drill 5/16-3/8” holes every 6-8” along the bottom edge of your form about an inch down from the edge. These work really nice on all types of bow designs allowing you to get everything positioned just right before buttoning up your form and applying air to the hose. It also makes cleaning up your pressure strips much easier. Food for thought. Kirk