I would build a Revibe but it sounds too much like a tremolo circuit mixed with a wah, and I really like the sound of vibrato (with the hope of emulating rotary sounds). I guess I'll have to shoot for building a vibrato only unit based on the AC30.
I
LOVE pitch shift vibrato!!!!!!
I don't think the AC30 type will be deep/thick enough of a true pitch vibrato. I played a reissue AC30 and the vibrato was meh. It's only 1 stage of pitch shift.
But, you could build a Warbler, it's true pitch shift vibrato. I built 1, it sounds great! It's all tube, only 3 small bottle tubes, 3 stages of pitch shift, has a proven design and layout with all documentation in the link below from our friend Sluckey. He did a great job on this build, from start to finish, as always. Build version 2.
https://www.sluckeyamps.com/warbler/warbler.htm I love the sound so much, that I bought 1 of the new Magnatone amps with the Maggie vibrato, the Twilighter Stereo. It's killer!!!!!! Nothing like, nothing comes close to it. It's it's own thing. There's a rotary switch on the control panel that you can set for using the vibrato in mono or stereo. It has a 2 x 12" cab. Set for mono it sounds good, real good, but set it for stereo and wham!!!!!

It gets this fluttery/watery sound added on top because of the effect flipping between the 2 speakers back and forth. Man!!!!
Neil Young has had a stereo Maggie on stage for a few songs for decades. I spoke with Larry Cragg, Neil's long time guitar/amp tech about the Maggie amps. Because of Cragg's experience with this/these amps, Magnatone asked him to help them develop the new line of pitch shift Maggies based on the old amps.
He told me that he told the guys at Magnatone don't even build the smaller cab 2 x 10" Maggie stereo, their too close together, it wont get the watery flutter like the 2 x 12" cab gets. He feels that's a huge part of that amps sound. I agree, I love it!
I'd like to see Maggie put out just a stereo preamp, with 4 stages of pitch shift, 2 on each side. And a SE stereo just like the Twilighter, but a single 6L6GC on each side, that would get the amp down to ~20w's total, instead of the 44w, 2 x 6V6 per side of the Twilighter.
I own a real Leslie, with this add on that lets you use a volume pedal/expression pedal so you can get different speeds/more speeds than just the normal 2 speeds, slow/fast. There's different speeds, in between the slow/fast of a Leslie, that to me sounds
much better for guitar.
The real Leslie with the extra speeds is unbelievable, if you like that sound. But the Maggie is stunning too. They are both amazing. And both are big, heavy and expensive. But their different animals.
I also have a Diamond Vibrato V1 pedal that's really good sounding. They re-issued it as V2. I don't know if they sound as good.
And there's many Leslie type pedals out there now, and many sound good to very good, but none of these move real air, like a real Leslie. The Maggie moves air, kind of, when in stereo with sound flipping back/forth between the 2 speakers, that's where the watery flutter comes from.
Maggie Stereo Twilighter;
And Lonnie Mack started the Maggie thing, a lot of his old cuts use it, it was his signature sound, just drenched with it.