Ok so far thanks so much for your replies. I'm thinking perhaps my skins are too thick then. I measure in inches (all my tools are invested in English

). What I did was aim for .04in skins with a .08 Nomex. It's the tight celled Nomex too so that's the 1/8th in stuff.
So my total top thickness was .16in.
But what I did, like I do on almost all my sound boards, was to thin the perimeter . So the center from the bridge area to the head block is full .16in but the perimeter is thinned out. I don't have measurements for that unfortunately. I did the thinning out on the top and bottom so as not to burn through the top.
As for glue, I used an epoxy called Evercoat. A friend of mine uses it to repair carbon fiber bicycle frames. I didn't weigh the amount of glue I used. But what I did was to mix up the glue and lay it out on some parchment paper on a flat board. Then I took the Nomex and layed it in, basically just touching it. I didn't lay it on thick. After it was dry the honeycomb cells were not full of glue. I could see a very very small bead of glue where the edge of Nomex touched the wood but I mean very little. The Nomex may have wicked up a bit of glue.
To glue the bottom skin on I just scrapped a thin layer of glue on the wood using a credit card. I suppose it would be interesting to see a cross section of it now.
Don't get me wrong, the guitar sounds ok I think just different. And I can't help but be biased to a 'plywood' guitar, after all that's what got me into lutherie in the first place was the solid wood constructed guitar.
Do you think a recording would help at all? I'm not much of a player but I can strum chords and pick a few classical pieces as best I can.
Thanks so much for any info, it's a new experience for me.