You're welcome.
Here is another schedule suggested by Ian Wakeling. It has nine distinct pairs of repeats.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1 5 9 11 3 7 8 12 2 4 6 10
1 4 7 11 3 8 9 10 2 5 6 12
The repeats are
(1,4) (1,11) (2,4) (2,6) (3,8) (5,6) (7,8) (9,10) (9,11)
Here is a better visual for the repeat pairs (maybe call them repairs or pairpeats :))