Geez-Louise! This is really a tempest in a teapot. It doesn't really matter how you figure out your exposure for the final print as long as you get good results. Streamlining the process is a good idea as long as we don't get overly hung up with details, calculations, etc., etc. And, I'm all for being able to visualize what exposure changes will look like in the final print. However, as Mark pointed out, the same exposure change (whether seconds, f-stops, percentages, etc.) will result in much different results with different contrast settings.
As I see it, one main concern is making a test strip that has (more) usable spacing. Using f-stop timing or percentages for the intervals will yield a more evenly-spaced result than just making the strip in multiples of the same interval. And, it allows one to cover a greater span of time. Making five 3-second exposures spans 15 seconds; making five exposures at 1/2-stop intervals spans a lot more, especially if your initial exposure is five seconds or more.
Personally, I use percentages, making test strips in 25% intervals. I make adjustments to print exposure in percentages as well and, when I get around to reprinting an image, I calculate the percentage of the base exposure I used for dodging and burning in the original print and apply that to the new base exposure time for the new print. That usually gets me close, but further refinements are almost always needed.
I don't think many great printers of the past (e.g., Ansel Adams et al.) used f-stop timing and their prints are just fine.
I like low-tech; I print with a metronome and think in percentages when it comes to exposure. I don't need a fancy timer or a table or to make any charts except maybe a 25%-interval sequence for test strips. Others swear by f-stop timing, others just use a fixed interval. Whatever works.
Doremus