Hi Michael,
I can't answer your question, but I think it relates to the question I was driving everyone nuts by asking repeatedly a while back, "What is the relationship between the blocking color, the DR, and the ES?" I was confusing myself for a while by thinking the print tonality had something to do with it, but even after I got that straight in my head (although it still makes no sense to me that print tonality isn't even in the equation) the question was still there unanswered. I finally decided that, for gum at least, there's no relationship, or the relationship is arbitrary and unique to each combination of printer, light source, etc, and there's no general law or principle that relates these things.
After reading your question above, I got to puzzling about why it is that when I spent some time determining blocking color for a number of different pigments, I found that all the pigments produced identical color charts (in other words the same blocking color would be indicated for all of the pigments I tested) when it seems to me that different pigments should have different ESs. But after reflecting on that for a while I suspect, but don't know for sure and don't have time to do that test, that since for that test I used my stock pigment mixes, that are mixed by eye to color saturation, that those particular mixes may actually have equal ESs. Another thing that makes me suspect this is that when I used a mix that wasn't mixed to saturation, it resulted in a different blocking color.
No answers, just more questions,
Katharine