I am considering adding a modification to my Leslie 125 to have it so when you power off the rotor, it will stop with the rotor opening facing forward.
Reasoning: so when it is "off", its speaker can still act as a volume boost with my other/main amp. When the rotor stops now, the volume boost is variable, likely due to the random direction and phase issues with the main amp when it stops.
So my crackpot idea is to have some switching mechanism that turns on an electromagnet next to the rotor when the power to the rotor is off, and a piece of magnetic metal on the rotor, with an equal counterweight on the opposite side made of lead, or some other nonmagnetic metal, so it will stop at the desired position.
So, wanting the simplest switching, lowest noise, correct strength magnet for this purpose...I have no clue with designing something like this.
I suppose an alternate method would be some king of physical stop...like a solenoid that triggers a pin to stop the rotor with another pin on it at the correct position, though I would want something soft so it wouldn't cause damage with an abrupt stop...seems simpler but too abrupt.
This is a Leslie 125, so only the one bottom drum rotor, but it is the heavy wood one (not the styrofoam one).
A bonus would be designing in some kind of delay, so the rotor would slow down naturally for a few seconds before the stop is triggered.