Hardman
Not sure exactly what you are seeking, but I'll voice an opinion.
Decrepit showed me a wave style rocker line - curved most the way through the board to improve turning control on waves. The question is how much rocker is enough to give control without buggering up early planing, and do you want turning ability or just to quell chop bounce ?. Your stated design criteria (8'2" or 249cm) long, 70 wide is shorter than most "mainstream" designs for that width, and if it's too curved on the bottom I think it will plough, not plane.
I'll give you the benefit of my own experience of several boards I've owned/ridden in this category. Not sure how your weight compares with me (106kg), but the principles remain.
My first intermediate board was a Bic 283 - 283 long, 69 wide, 150lt, fair rocker, lots of V. Was very predictable in sea, but over 30cms longer than your design and was pretty slow, and the boom smashed the nose all the time, so I traded it. Great intermediate board - if the nose had been a bit shorter would have been better.
Tried a mate's Bic Techno Large - 263 long, 69 wide, 135lt, more rocker than 283, double concave bottom, very narrow tail. EXTREMELY manouverable, pretty good in chop given width, not too easy to get planing due to rocker, short waterline length and narrow tail. I did'nt ride it for long, but wasn't immediately impressed.
Tried a 2004 JP Excite Ride 160. See JP for specs. Felt just like my old Bic but a bit more manouverable, and lighter. Like the Bic, it felt fairly pedestrian, but very predictable. Most the people I know who own one love it - particularly those who don't sail every week and who enjoy the sail, not the speed.
Bought a JP Freeride 129 - 270 long, 70 wide, 135lt. Fast, planes easily. Gave it to a 75kg mate on a 15kt day at Safety Bay a few weeks ago and he fell in love with the speed and early planing. No problems with it bouncing around in the ocean.
I guess my point is you are looking for light wind performance. When wind is light, you inherently get less chop to bounce you around. In light wind you will go slower (the wind is going slower), and getting on the plane is the challenge - early planing matters. If your design has a wave board rocker, a kicked up nose and a short waterline, how well is it going to plane ?
I reckon you give it a kicked up nose so it doesn't submarine, but cut it off square like the Bic Techno Large to keep waterline length up. Make the bottom & tail flat, but consider using a decent V or a double concave bottom (ie Starboard) to smooth the bounce. Adjust the tail width to suit your weight - lighter sailor = less width.
Hope your design is a cracker.

It would be an interesting project.