Can I put a different perspective? And yes, I do know that I am in a minority, and yes, you can call me arrogant, you won't be the first, but I really do think that manufacturers' recommendations for blade position are simply wrong. And I believe I can justify my stance.
First let me state a caveat. The Inca, IIRC, has a direct drive motor which is flange mounted. No pulleys. That does make it more difficult to track the bottom wheel, I'll grant you. You are reliant on the manufacturers doing the job properly for you. I had forgotten that. But as it is a very well-made machine, let us assume that they have done it properly.
Now then, will someone please explain to me why it is OK to have the blade in the middle if it is 1/16" wide but not if it is 6mm wide? I'm a bear of very little brain, but that seems to me to be totally nuts. It's either OK or it isn't.
Furthermore (and I do realise this is more important on crowned wheels than flat ones) how on earth can you have the blade cutting straight ahead if it is on the front of a (particularly crowned) wheel. It can't and it doesn't. So if it is cutting off at 1 o'clock you have to twist the rip fence to accommodate it. That means that your mitre track is useless.
Forget all notion of tracking the blade at the front, get it where is is cutting true north, wherever on the tyre that is, keep you rip fence parallel to your mitre track and let blade drift be a distant memory.
I've done it this way for years now, have taught others to do it this way and no-one has yet told me that they are unhappy with the resultant performance.
You could, of course, be the first
There, I've been and gone and said it.
S