If you want that kind of precision I would suggest a track saw. Expensive I know but the cut, safety, dust control,and ease is phenomenal. I personally have a dewalt, and like it over the festool and makita do to its plunge mechanism but would own a makita and would be happy as well. Festool nice but stupid expensive and no better than the other two.
The rubber anti chip edge is cut by the saw and is the cut line so no measuring to offset guide. The saws have a riving knife to keep the blade from pinching. If you cut on a piece of blue board and hook the saw up to a vacuum the is no dust and the cut quality on fine ply is perfect and rivals high dollar sliding table saws.
The second choice would be a ez smart. It's basically a track saw using a cheaper circular saw as a power unit. They have a special base plate the bolts to the plate and you can then tweak the saw to be straight. You could still use your saw off the track against a strait edge of you wanted to (loose depth of cut by the thickness of base plate) but I suggest the track. It's as good as the above mentioned saws as far as cut quality, if your arbor is straight but lacks the plunge, dust control, and anti kick back/riving knife.
Third option it to get a 1/4 inch aluminum plate and make your own base plate. A drill and jig saw will easily cut out the blade slot. Then clamp it to the saws base, align, and drill and countersink plate and use counter sunk machine screws and nut to hold it in place.
I am unfamiliar with the saws you are mentioning but I do know from researching the ez smart tracks saw(before purchasing the dewalt) the recommended saw was 5007mg and 5008mg makitas due to the precision and quality. You will notice even makita has a cheaper line with steel base plates and suffer in precision(fine for most construction use). Several of them were happily using hitachi's but I am sure it was their upper model
Went and looked, they are using the C7BMR. It's upgraded in several way including a blade brake. Also the motor housing is aluminum and the bearings ride in an aluminum bore and the the whole housing has an plasic overlay for double insulation. Cheap saw just have a plastic housing.
I would still get the 5007mg however as the extra money gets you a nice case and rip fence, accessories the hitachi doesn't have and the makita is really tops, unless you want a worm drive.