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I'm a little surprised that someone who, according to their profile, is EAN certified and an instructor says this.
I'd expect someone with credentials like that to be able to calculate MOD for any standard mix like EAN36, EAN32 and EAN28. Whether it's for 2 bar, 1.6 bar, 1.4 bar or any other pPO2. By extension, I'd expect that person to be able to calculate the MOD for any oxygen percentage, like 34% or 21%.
In other words, I'd expect someone who is EAN certified to be able to calculate the MOD for EAN21 at 1.4 bar O2. Perhaps even be able to reflect on the differences between air and EAN21. Me, I dive both nitrox and air. My PDC is permanently in nitrox mode, and if my tank contains air, I'll just tell my computer that I'm diving EAN21. Not unexpectedly, it gives me the same NDL times as if I told it I was diving air. It doesn't give me the MOD, though, because it doesn't have that functionality in air mode.
slightly in @Boston Breakwater 's defense, and at risk of being pedantic which he apparently had blocked be for, see my original post, #14 in this thread, where the MOD of air is a bit more complicated than nitrox. With the nitrox mixes that we use as standard, ppO2 is going to be the leading factor for setting the MOD and as such is the only variable that is really talked about in the nitrox classes. Some will talk about narcosis, but those are usually dated courses since our current understanding is that oxygen and nitrogen are comparably narcotic so there is no narcosis benefits from diving nitrox. What they don't do is talk about gas density, and CO2 retention. CO2 retention being a far larger factor in most peoples experience of narcosis than inert gases are, and with deep air, that should be your leading variable as you set your MOD.