Nice FAQ, Rich!
Though I'd be very cautious extending such a rule of thumb to other materials. Once you get into the actual testing of stress relaxation or creep, more commonly elasomers are tested at constant strain (stress relaxation) and plastics at constant stress (creep). Also, whether your experiment is flexural, compressive, or tensile makes a huge difference on the normalized stresses / strains you mention. Finally, the specimen or part shape makes a huge difference (can the material 'flow' or not etc.). I must say I haven't read the Husted & Thompson paper you refer to in the FAQ, but I know for a fact that most plastics will not be at 100% of instantaneous value after 6 minutes, and the value of 80% appears to be a little high for various materials like PVC (somewhere around 65% after 1 hour is pretty realistic). There are lots of practical problems, obviously, with running these actual tests, but there are some low-cost solutions out there with various labs in the world that can run these tests in mechanical frames for long periods of time.
-Ron