Thanks for the explanation. This quote was exactly what I was saying above. They had multi-level diving as a goal, but the RDP table does not enable it. That was never intended for the RDP--that was why they made the wheel. My point was that you cannot use the RDP accurately for multi-level dives. Because they always had multi-level diving in mind, if they thought the RDP could do it, they would not have gone on to make the wheel.This is true. But that desire was not embedded in the RDP table.
I learned to use the wheel for my DM exam, and I learned it again for the instructor exam. The instructor exam showed a problem with both the wheel and the kinds of exams they did. On one of the wheel questions, I came up with an answer that was not one of the choices; it was precisely in between two of them. I did it again and again and again. I finally chose one of them, and it was wrong. IN his review, the instructor did it with his wheel and got the correct answer. I handed him my wheel and had him do it. He came up with the answer I did. My wheel was perfectly calibrated, but it gave a different answer from his.
Of course, the real problem is that in real life, it does not matter. Both answers were close enough for diving. It only matters in multiple choice tests.