Thanks guys. Fortunately ebony conceals mistakes well. I didn't make too many, but one of them had a significant chip-out.
After a week of fooling around trying to decide what to do for the tail wedge, I spent last night and today working on it. I had to order a jeweler's saw to make this one, and it finally got here yesterday.
I had one piece of gold mop left over from inlaying the fretboard, and cut a 1/8" x 1" piece.
I then cut a pocket on a small strip of ebony to receive the mop.
I had earlier cut the tail wedge shape into some cocobolo to match the binding, and drew in the ebony/mop inlay location.
The ebony and cocobolo were the same thickness, so I used a couple of passes around the rim of where the ebony would sit.
A little fine tuning and they all came together. I guess I hadn't thought all the way thru this, but the coco and the ebony are both pretty dark. I'm just hoping after putting on finish that the ebony will show up well. I wanted to set the mop in the center, but if I want to put a strap on this guitar, it might have been destroyed by the hole for the pin.
Next I applied the bwb purfling to either side of the wedge with some CA.
Routed out the channel for the wedge, and glued it in with white glue.
Tomorrow I hope to start routing for the binding and purfling channels. And I have a question - If I want to miter the purfling at the wedge with that of the horizontal purfling below the binding, what's the best way to go at that?
Thanks for looking.