Thanks to everyone for the comments. I use two MFT 1080 joined together and dead flat with plastic shims. My first introduction to Festool was from Solid Surface Guys and there biggest complaint was the tracks bowed when using a router. That was understandable because more often than naught your applying a lateral force. The SS G's would back up the Festool track with a square straight edge. Later at AWS in Anaheim I mentioned this to Festool and they denied, out of hand, the tracks would bend. Surprisingly three years later they (Festool) came out with the 2 Series tracks.
Back to my problem. I have two FS3000/2 Tracks and if I put the aluminum edges together (rubber outside) there is a gap of 1/16" between the two. No big deal 1/32" each.
Whey I process sheet goods I first take 1/2" off the long edge. But if I reverse the track and use the aluminum edge as a straight edge I'm bowed out in the middle by 3/32" or so, its always convex so to speak. If I them come back and mitre that edge. I'm now bowed in. Since using a Plunge Saw for straight cut the control force is straight down and clamped at both ends the bow would at max be 1/32" either way. It's not.
When I mitre sheet goods (MDF, Armour Core, or A1 veneer core) the problem is the same. Mitre cuts involve lateral forces but no way near that to account for the bowing.