Mark Chase
ATB=AlwaysTalkingBollocks
Yes, I think this is right - any elevation of CO2 (hypercapnia) is described as CO2 retention.
CO2 retention can occur either due to elevated CO2 in the breathing gas (by-pass, etc.) or because of inadequate ventilation. When CO2 rises the brain normally causes ventilation to increase (sub-consciously) to clear the excess CO2. Retention which comes about due to inadequate ventilation isn't anything to do with breakthrough of the scrubber, and wouldn't be detected by the post-scrubber sensor.
It seems that the act of scuba-diving can alter the way the brain works and in some people elevated work-of-breathing due to things like gas-density, depth, equipment-choices, hard-work, etc. can cause CO2 to be retained. CO2 retained in this way is often differentiated in forum-diving-circles from scrubber-breakthrough and I think that is the distinction Mark is alluding to.
CO2 retention due to inadequate ventilation isn't anything to do with the scrubber, and even occurs OC. Some people, called CO2-retainers, are able to tolerate elevated CO2 levels without experiencing the initial symptom of hypercapnia. This is another use of that term.
I'm not an expert, but that is how I understand it. Sorry if this isn't useful to you.
Matt.
I have only had one C02 hit and it was on OC
Breathig C02 is not retaining C02
Your body is not holding it in or failing to expell it, its doing its best to exhale it but its just going back into the loop arround and back in your mouth. There is no retention involved any more than death by low PP02 on high helium mixes can be called "retaining helium"?