This question is about the status of the following.
Meta-hypothesis. Let $X$ be an irreducible component of an eigenvariety. Then there exist: (a) a pseudo-representation/character $\psi$ along $X$, specializing to what it should at classical points; (b) a "cover" $f\colon X' \rightarrow X$, a locally free sheaf $V$ on $X'$, and an ${\scr O}_{X'}$-linear Galois action on $V$, such that that $f^*\psi$ is the pseudocharacter associated with $V$.
Questions:
- What instances of this statement are known, and with what constructions?
- In what generality do we expect the hypothesis to hold, and under what meaning of "cover" (and "eigenvariety")?
- What about the Coleman-Mazur-Buzzard eigencurve of tame level $N$? Can one take $X'$ to be the normalization of $X$, and if so, are the details written anywhere?
Some remarks. There are quite general results on (a) by Chenevier, Bellaiche-Chenevier,...; the less clear part (to me) is (b). Two constructions which come to mind and work "on the nose" ($X'=X$) in special cases are the following: (1) for the eigencurve of level 1, take (the Jacquet module of) completed cohomology; (2) if the mod $p$ reduction $\overline{\psi}$ of the universal $\psi$ on $X$ corresponds to an irreducible mod $p$ Galois representation $\overline{\rho}$, then the generic fibre of the Spf of the universal deformation ring $T_{\overline{\psi}}=T_{\overline{\rho}}$ admits a map from $X$ and carries a universal Galois-sheaf $W$, which can then be pulled back to a Galois-sheaf $V$ on $X$.