There was also the Nakamichi TX1000 (the CT's bigger brother I thought).
I believe it is more easily solved using a method like you describe, though that requires a 'virtual spindle' rather than a real one, and some kind of ranging apparatus. As you hint in your post, if physical and working off the outer edge of the disc as a reference, this only works if the stamping is done so that the outermost groove is equidistant (or actually, the 'appropriate distance' (because the appropriate distance should decrease linearly by the groove spacing over one revolution)) from the edge of the disc. If done based on the grooves (the ideal), that requires another ranging device measuring groove placement on the surface rather than either spindle or outer edge in order to set the records place on the mat. That sounds difficult.
On the face of it, the Nakamichi solution is actually somewhat elegant, because the timing and distance of the "swing" is perfectly regular and therefore easily programmable, and it is not very fast, so there is no 'hysteresis' involved in 'violent' direction changes (assuming overhang of zero - if overhang is not zero, it becomes a bit more complicated I think). If there were slits in the TT platter/mat which allowed laser ranging to the underside of the record with enough frequency, this could be set by the TT before the stylus touched the vinyl, otherwise it would have to be done based on the arm being mechanically sensitive to the swing.
I, for one, would be interested to see Dertonarm wade in...
I believe it is more easily solved using a method like you describe, though that requires a 'virtual spindle' rather than a real one, and some kind of ranging apparatus. As you hint in your post, if physical and working off the outer edge of the disc as a reference, this only works if the stamping is done so that the outermost groove is equidistant (or actually, the 'appropriate distance' (because the appropriate distance should decrease linearly by the groove spacing over one revolution)) from the edge of the disc. If done based on the grooves (the ideal), that requires another ranging device measuring groove placement on the surface rather than either spindle or outer edge in order to set the records place on the mat. That sounds difficult.
On the face of it, the Nakamichi solution is actually somewhat elegant, because the timing and distance of the "swing" is perfectly regular and therefore easily programmable, and it is not very fast, so there is no 'hysteresis' involved in 'violent' direction changes (assuming overhang of zero - if overhang is not zero, it becomes a bit more complicated I think). If there were slits in the TT platter/mat which allowed laser ranging to the underside of the record with enough frequency, this could be set by the TT before the stylus touched the vinyl, otherwise it would have to be done based on the arm being mechanically sensitive to the swing.
I, for one, would be interested to see Dertonarm wade in...