I agree with Steve's point on pushing it to the limit. You don't know where the limit is until you go past it.
It's common for braces to get shaved in the quest for more bass, but I've seen some tops that where they wen too far, resulting in a floppy top that can't resist the pull of the strings. Sometimes a floppy top is so weak that it pulls up behind the bridge, or sinks in front of the bridge or both. This deformation may happen quickly, or may take some time, perhaps months or more. Sometimes a top is floppy enough that you get muddy, dead-sounding bass and weak trebles without the deformation.
Some of us think one way to get more bass response is to loosen up the back, making it loose enough that it resonates about a half-step above the top's resonance. This allows the back to contribute to the top's output, especially in the lower pitches. Others of us believe that back should be stiff. Depends on what you want out of the guitar.
Maybe the bridge is too heavy, bracing too wide, too tall, bridge plate too thick, too big, etc. If you have a light bridge, you might get less bass, but maybe not, if the weights of other top bracing, such as the bridge plate, make up for it. It's all a balancing act.
These are just a few of the zillion things that could make a difference. Or not.
This being your first, the main thing is you got it put together, it plays, probably sounds and looks pretty good. You already know some of its shortcomings. That is a good thing. Opportunities for improvement will appear the longer you play it, the more you tweak it.
I finished my first three years ago. I was really pleased with it. But after a few weeks, I realized its many shortcomings. Weak bass, muddy mids, fretwork only so-so, intonation off, lacking "presence". The tonal shortcomings improved a bit with time, but after a year, I started messing with it. Got the neck relief right, re-fretted, reset the neck, shaved the top braces, shaved the back braces. It doesn't look so good anymore, but it's twice the guitar it was when I first strung it up. Next, I'll probably pull the EIR bridge plate and put in osage orange or BRW. See what happens. Then maybe a lighter bridge or at least something besides ebony. This may never end, but by changing one thing at a time, I'm learning tons about what affects what. The ones I've built since are much improved because of what I learned from building the first one, but much more because of all the tweaking.
You're on your way, so just keep at it. The learning never stops.
_________________ now known around here as Pat Foster _________________ http://www.patfosterguitars.com
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