One of my attachments would not post, too big. I had to make a graphic from a screen shot and crop it, then attach later, thus the attached files are not in correct order.
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I am not going to say what is right or what is wrong, I will just say what I did when I built my wheel in 2013. That wheel has been trouble free on my Nomad since then.
I bought the Nomad frame in 2013, bought my Ryde Andra 30 CSS rims from SJS in the same order. I bought my hub from another supplier in Germany. I live in USA, bought Wheelsmith spokes and Sapim nipples from a supplier in USA. My hub is for rim brakes, not disc. I also built up a 36 spoke wheel, so my spoke lengths are slightly different than a typical SJS 32 spoke wheel.
I have a lot of difficulty keeping the terminology of leading and trailing spokes straight, so I look at half of the spokes as being pulling spokes, meaning when you pedal and that puts torque on the hub, that hub then pulls on half the spokes with more tension, which forces the wheel to go around. So, I refer to those spokes as the pulling spokes. I do not really have a name for the other half of the spokes, for purposes of this e-mail I will call them non-pulling spokes.
The manual you cited is newer than the manual I used. Since I sourced my hub from Germany, I received instructions in German, which I cannot read. So, I downloaded the english language manuals from Rohloff at that time. And I still have my copies of those downloaded manuals which are older than yours.
I attached some files, the file labeled R1 has pages 55 and 56, I am referencing only page 55:
It makes it clear that my 26 inch wheel takes a 2 cross pattern, it is bigger than 24 inch.
In photo 3, you clearly are on the non-drive side of the wheel (or left side of the bike) because the hub cap screws in the photo are only on the non-drive side. Thus, when the hub rotates counter clockwise, the wheel will push the bike forward. From that photo the spoke labeled "leading" will pull harder on rim to accelerate the bike, thus, that means that what Rohloff calls the leading spokes are what I call pulling spokes.
And you can see in that photo that the head of the spoke is inside, not outside of the flange on a pulling or leading spoke.
The pulling spokes on both sides of the wheel (both drive side and non-drive side) should have their spoke heads matching, meaning on both sides of the wheel the leading or pulling spokes should have their heads on the inside sides of their flanges.
The purpose of photos 3 and 4 are to tell you how to lace the non-drive side spokes relative to the cap screws. I believe that SJS may have done this differently than the photos on page 55 on some bikes.
File R2 shows pages 35 and 36. Of the three hubs that do not have disc brakes, you can see that all three of those hub photos have the spokes oriented to the cap screws and all three of those hubs have the pulling spokes with the spoke heads inside the same as in the photo on page 55. The fourth wheel with disc brake, the disc obscures the detail on the spokes, cap screws and flange holes. Also all three of those rim brake wheels have the leading or pulling spoke heads on the inside on both drive and non-drive side.
Third file shows my rear wheel, photo was taken in 2014. (SJS recommends against using kickstands, thus disregard the kickstand on my bike.) I laced my wheel to match the photos in the Rohloff manual.
So, I am not saying what is right or what is wrong, I am just saying I matched the photos that Rohloff had in their manuals at the time I built the wheel.
I am not going to spend an time comparing old and new Rohloff manuals or how they compare to SJS documents, my bike works fine so I am done researching it.
I do not know if you have built wheels before, but the Rohloff wheel is an expensive wheel to get it wrong. I would recommend against learning on that wheel. But if this is your first wheel and if you are going to lace it up, I think Sheldon has an excellent tutorial on wheelbuilding at:
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/wheelbuild.htmlEven though I have been building wheels off and on since the 1970s and I built my own wheel, I had a friend check the spoke tension since I do not have a tension meter.