No, that's not true either. I think you've just got your logic a bit mixed up about it all. If you want to find any percentage of the data, you're going to need to find out what one standard deviation is first and then multiply it (not just change the denominator like you've done).
What I mean is that you can't use the first two formulas because we will always have to deal with
99.7% of data. We don't get smaller data sets from VCAA. We won't get a distribution with only
68% of the data shown (most likely), and it wouldn't make sense to get that and not
99.7%. But say you did get a range of data that was only
68% of a bigger set of data, the range and standard deviation of that particular
68% will work with the first formula, right?
I would always use the last formula because you have to account for -3SD and +3SD in
all cases