The likely reason of the blade tracking as such is due to the tires.
If you've got flat tires like those seemingly cork/rubber composite ones,
which normally get dressed to a crowned profile after being installed on the wheels,
then that would explain matters.
Why, one may ask?...
Well, one could take note of what happens to something flat when bent around a circumference
like a spare tire, or infact a blade.
The sides will curl upwards on the sides, lust like a crown.
If that crown gets nibbled off, say from misalignment issues
then the blade as mentioned above, will get the set compressed
if adjusting tracking.
Why would one be fooling about trying to track their blade one might ask?...
Should the blade not wish to stay put anywhere around the front of the wheel, and one experiences excessive rubbing of the blade on the thrust guides/and the blade not wanting to cut/burning, then it's quite likely one will try some troubleshooting.
Dressing the tires to a crowned profile would be the fix, should that happen,
but where to put the apex of the camber might be relative to where you wish the
blade to run on the wheels, i.e to suit the max/min of the thrust guides/assembly and not beyond.
This "flat to some" ahem.. tire, on the Centauro CO600, is 1mm closer to the front.
Well..
seemingly flat until taken outta the packaging,
which resulted in a wild goose chase for me..
in believing my Italian machine should have flat tires,
That cost me a considerable amount of vulcanized rubber, thinking I was doing something wrong!..
Silly me, as I had the answer all along!
It just seemed flat..
but when stretched out (gap to account for the tongue on these "snap on" tires)
One can indeed see the crowned profile
Which is
offset by 1mm,
so unless one reckons this tire from the official UK dealer is a reject...
Then this means there is an acting crown/apex on the wheels,
as one cannot suggest the slight camber evident is to account for anticlastic curvature,
(see Cooks sawmill video above)
i.e creating a totally flat profile when installed.
Updated rebated block to accept scraper,
much more suited to being shimmed w/ duct tape on two axis
relatave to the wheel
not shown, but one must dress tires with the blade installed to stop top wheel from tilting.
I've posted all that before, if you wish to save yourself some rubber/effort.
If you make a good job of dressing those tires, and you look at the top of the wheel
(guides backed off)
and see the blade walking, then the wheels could be aligned using a scribing beam to
draw a line from whichever wheel in non-adjustable.
That machine being quite a bit different than the usual copies of/or the modern Italian saw design.
I've a post about bandsaw wheel and motor alignment elsewhere.
All the best
Tom