Propsync said:True, but your Jepps should be tailored for your airline. I look at the Jepps to see if I can go, not my Ops Specs. As someone said, the back of the 10-9 tells all. BTW, enlighten me on how you can takeoff 1600/0/0. I don't know if you're 91 or 135 or 121, makes a difference. For me, if all three work we couldn't go in that case. Plus I've never seen that much variance in the RVR units, a few hundred feet difference is as much as I've seen.
Jepp plates are not tailored to individual airlines. The only thing tailored to your airline would be info pages like 10-7 pages that show information specific to your airline. The 10-9 page is generic and shows the lowest applicable RVR (or visibility) that the runway allows. Your airline may or may not allow what the plate says. It's all up to what is in your Op-Specs.
Generally, most company Op-Specs will allow you to go with one inop RVR transmisometer, as long as the other two are reporting above the minimum required by your Op-Specs. I doubt any company's Op-Specs allow you to take off with 2 of 3 out though. The 1600/0/0 case would probably be a no-no and you'd have to use tower visibility. Again, you have to check your individual company's Op-Specs though.