Good job. You can tinker with it to get more up front and a more even distribution but Ultimately you are in the zone; replaced steer weight, drive axle weight within spec. Assuming trailer is level and tongue weight is in the 10 to 15 percent range she will handle an emergency swerve around, stop well, and have good stability in the wind.
911 got an even better balance and showed his unloaded slip. Fwiw 911 also adjusted his TV & TT weight distribution and his WDH enough to bring his tongue weight down to where he also kept within GVWR.
Having a weight slip that shows you are below GVWR calms the yellow sticker keystone kops of payload. Without it they will add up weight estimates and tell you that you need to buy a bigger truck and horrific tales of a white knuckle experience with their 1500 while towing a smaller lighter camper. Sometimes they are a bit confused though as many have never seen a weight slip let alone have any idea what the weight slip is to be used for. Not to be haten they just haven’t been shown yet so help them along and show them.
Fwiw when I transport a larger trailer wherein my CVWR is 15k I prefer not to set it up below TV GVWR. I just get axle weights under maximums and balanced best I can. Naturally still verifying TW is in range. The reason is it’s safer & more stable if the combined TV axle weights match or exceed the TT axle weight. Just don’t tell the payload sticker keystone kops it makes their head explode. VernDiesel