I guess what everybody is trying to say here is : after you determine the true choke in a barrel by sutracting the measured choke diameter from the measured bore diameter, the result will be your amount of choke, in decimal inches ( eg .030"). For a 16 gauge, approximately each .009" you open that choke will change your effective choke by a nominal amount ( eg, full to modified). These amounts are not absolute and are variable and subjective to a certain extent, as has been noted. The true amount of choke is determined by pellet count ( average of ten shots) and there will usually be a spread in this string of 10-20 pellets between the maximum and the minimum count. Try a different load and your results will be different, so unless you are only ever going to use one load you will need to do this with a number of different loads and average them! Most people don't have the time or patience to shoot all these targets, count thousands of pellet hits and tabulate the results, which won't apply the same in a different gun.
Choke results are based on averages, they are not exact and trying to split hairs will only result in confusion and frustration.
If you insist on opening these chokes yourself be sure to carefully check your patterns after the job to make sure that your point of impact is correct and that your barrel convergence is correct and that your double isn't now shooting the different barrels to different places. I have seen far too many guns ruined by improper opening of the chokes and is now cross eyed, wall eyed or even one barrel high and one low or any combination thereof. Personally I now avoid guns with altered chokes unless I know and respect who did the work or unless I can do a quick live fire test.