I started to trim some ends off some 14″ w. pieces of Pine recently for a project2022-06-14-14.30.jpg – and noticed that the last few inches of the cut it "bumped out slightly". Cuts made from left side of the blade. I made some other cuts (with different stock) and noticed as the far edge of the piece reached the center - it started to press into the blade plate and the back edge of the blade then started to cut a fresh cut about a 64th. So again, stopping the piece as the blade just finished the cut - leaves a "bi-level" surface - see attached image. I keep the mitre slots consistently parallel using a digital gauge and never had this issue before. Just started with a newly sharpened Forrest WWII which are the only blades used on this saw. I then adjusted the mitre slots so there was a gap at the back of blade on left side from +.005-+.020 and no difference. I also used two other sleds including one that had new runners and had just been calibrated. Riving knife removed. I checked motor and arbor mounts to make sure they were tightened and of course the bolts mounting the table to cabinet. Oddly could not replicate on right side. I did a quick search and the only hit similar also remarked that the WWII blade was being used - and the only suggestion (Bob Rogowski) was to check mitre slot parallelism - and if that didn't work "maybe saw was possessed". When I have blades sharpened I always request that run-out be checked and plate flattened if necessary. Is there anything that I may be missing here? I could make a right side sled but would have to take off fence each time it was used which is maybe minor in scheme of things. Any and all help/suggestions/thoughts would be appreciated.