The second and third PWHT will have a marginal influence on mechanical properties of SA516-70. Compsared to the values in normalized condition the main loss in tensile strength and impact values will occur with your first PWHT.
Based on company-internal neuronal network with some 10000 values for SA516-70, a forecast for a 1 inch plate is:
a = average decrease in tensile strength in ksi
b = average increase in transition temperature (20 ftlbs Charpy-V transverse) in °F
(all values compared to the normalized condition)
1st PWHT : a = 2.8 b = 22
2nd PWHT : a = 3.0 b = 23
3rd PWHT : a = 3.3 b = 23
Influences on mechanical properties for the first PWHT:
Chemical composition has only a small influence for SA516-70.
Material thickness (due to metal structure) has a significant influence on the losses. For an identical PWHT (1150°F, 1h):
0.5 inch: a = 3.6
2.0 inches: a = 2.2
4.0 inches: a = 1.7
But generally, for thicker plates, longer holding times and slower heating and cooling rates are required by Code, which partly compensates this effect. For 1150°F and holding, heating and colling according UCS 56:
0.5 inch: a = 3.2
1 inch: a = 2.8
2 inches: a = 2.5
4 inches: a = 2.3
Holding time surely has an influence for the first PWHT as showed on the examples.
The main influence is temperature.
For Charpy-V-values, the tendency is the same, but more difficult to illustrate, as the shape of Charpy-V-curves changes with material thickness and PWHT conditions, but also other parameters like cleanliness and residual contents (sulphur, phophorus, nitrogen, hydrogen,...) have an influence. As ilustrated in the Arcelor Mittal Paper, for a given temperature and thickness, it is possible to illustrate the decrase of impact values with PWHT. But Charpy-values strongly depend on the chemical composition chosen by the manufacurer. A plate with C = 0,16% and Mn = 1,45% has significant higher values then a plate with C = 0,28 and Mn = 1,0%.