In practice I can tell you when I'm in gear 11 because I change up to 14 and then back three notches, but for the rest I have no idea.
Is your hub so well run in that you can't hear the difference in sound when shifting between 8th and 7th (or vice versa)?
It's raining cats and dogs here, John, so I can't take my bike out to discover the answer to your question. Short answer: I don't know. I'll have to ride the bike on some quiet piece of level road and pay attention to know for sure.
When my Rohloff was new, I put Tippex (white typewriter corrector fluid) on gears 8 and 11, but it has long since worn away. In fact, in 10K kilometers and change, some part of the numbers have worn from the rotary control. I hardly ever look at it, and find gear 11 by going to 14 and stepping back three notches, burp.
You should also understand that when I say a Rohloff is silent, or mine is anyway, I'm referring to gear 11. Theoretically all other gears should be somewhat louder or in the lower gears at least more audible because you aren't riding as fast and generating as much wind. But I've long since ceased listening to the gearbox because all the gears require a) a special arrangement of riding on the most dangerous and fastest piece of road around here, because it is smooth and has well-defined white and yellow lines to kill the noise of my 60mm Big Apples, which are the loudest thing about my bike, including the Rohloff, but is so busy it can only be done in the middle of the night, and b) I have to listen carefully because there isn't much in it.
On the other hand, I've been a classical music critic all my life, so I'm very aware of noises off, and I design and build my own single-ended tube hi-fi to be played through electrostatic loudspeakers, so extraneous noise is the second-greatest obsession with me, next to micro-vibrations in my hands (a writer is a manual laborer: he operates a keyboard). So, if there was something to hear in the last several thousand kilometers, I would have heard it, and stopped to investigate.
Also, see above what John Saxon says about "feels/sounds" -- yeah, I know, Herr Rohloff, an upright
German engineer, is cringing! -- but it happens to be an exact description: You just know when your Rohloff HGB is in a happy place and you stop turning the control.
By the way, I haven't adjusted the rotary control on my bike in the slightest in over 10K. People who get a ride on my bike are amazed at how loose I leave it. I don't see the point in adjusting it when the transmission appears happy. It's just a different paradigm to a derailleur whose efficiency and even operation depends on fine adjustments.
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I don't think we know for sure when a Rohloff is run in. There'll be a natural variation because it is a piece of hand-assembled intricate engineering built
light for what it offers in convenience and longevity, with the assembler having some leeway for judgement calls. So different Rohloff HGBs will run in at different rates, possibly significantly different rates because the service life is so long.
I felt that mine was a bit looser at 2K and there was another bigger step at about 5-6K, that's kilometers, where it felt looser again and some tiny noises that I knew to listen for in gears other than 11 had gone away. I'd originally thought that the Rohloff would never have the smooth gearchange of a Shimano Nexus, which is a thing of wonder if it is set up right; but about there I changed my mind. The next significant thing that happened was that at 8500km I replaced half-worn Big Apple Lites with new ones, and I noticed in the middle of listening to the rougher ride of the minimal tread on the Big Apples that of gears 7 and 8, eight appeared to have gone silent. As I say above, about 2K further on, I can't tell you anything about gear 7 without riding the bike under ideal testing conditions. Maybe I can tell a difference, maybe I can't.
Sorry to be so longwinded about telling you I can't tell you, but you'll arrive at the same place with your Rohloff eventually.