Surely not, Peter.
It will only be necessary to get the wheel synchronised to the scan correctly.
If you look at the diagram you posted, it is the start of the scan and the entire line falls within the filter segment at the top of the screen. The wheel then rotates as the scan progresses downwards and, when it reaches the bottom it will have exactly the same relationship to the filter wheel as shown except that the entire segment will have rotated and it is the next segment which is now waiting at the top for the scan to restart.
For that to work, the Aurora will need to change colour with every field. If it only changes at frame rate, as suggested by Jeffrey, two consecutive segments of the wheel will need to be the same colour - effectively, replace with three double size segments.
It will only be necessary to get the wheel synchronised to the scan correctly.
If you look at the diagram you posted, it is the start of the scan and the entire line falls within the filter segment at the top of the screen. The wheel then rotates as the scan progresses downwards and, when it reaches the bottom it will have exactly the same relationship to the filter wheel as shown except that the entire segment will have rotated and it is the next segment which is now waiting at the top for the scan to restart.
For that to work, the Aurora will need to change colour with every field. If it only changes at frame rate, as suggested by Jeffrey, two consecutive segments of the wheel will need to be the same colour - effectively, replace with three double size segments.






