Chip,
You are looking over the center of the cowl, under the prop. This is very common. You are looking well down the runway, so it is causing little tire squeak. You can cure this left of center in five minutes and never have any problems again. Make sure you are looking between your legs for the alignment of the longitudinal axis of the airplane. Look closer to the aircraft to be sure the center line is between your legs. Keep the yellow taxi line between your legs. Get out and be sure the nose wheel is on the taxi line. You are sitting a good bit left of the center of the airplane. This make the sight angle across the center of the cowl, under the prop, a considerable angle. By making the prop appear to be over the center line, you are landing left of center.
This common problem seldom gets cured because it causes only a squeak and jink on landing a nose wheel airplane. Imagine autorotating a Chinook helicopter while having the center line appear to be under the very short nose. The pilot on the left side (actually co-pilot) is about six feet left of the center of the cockpit. The angle to the nose, six feet forward, is 45 degrees. That much crab on touchdown would definitely cause a roll-over.
This common problem causes real grief in side by side tail wheel airplanes. Just a slight crab angle on touchdown causes one main wheel to touchdown first and the tail will try to come around. A ground loop at stall speed, or higher, will catch the wing, wipe out the gear, and catch the prop every time.
Go out to the end of the runway and look at the black marks left of center line. That is where most nose wheel pilots land. You are not the only one. Keep the center line between your legs. You will never land on the left side of the runway again, unless you want to.
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