As a non-CCR diver, I can't see the need for a gas you can breathe from 70m to the surface if you have bailed out.
You are not going to be on that gas at the end of the ascent. If you are, you are going to be fizzing like anything, so being hypoxic may not be your major concern when coming up from 6m where you can breathe it...
Regards
Not necessarily breath it to the surface, but could breath it from the surface down and back up. Why carry a gas that could kill you on the surface if you don't absolutely have to? I believe this has been a factor in some mishaps when it is plumbed into the ADV which then leaks in shallow water. Also having more O2 in the mix gives you more options--say you loose your O2...Having more in your Dil gives you more options.
Again WHY CARRY A MIX THAT COULD KILL YOU WHEN YOU DONT HAVE TO?
Lazy, cheap haven't thought it through?
Back to the CO2 stuff. My personal experience indicates that if you are fit and mentally tough you can get through it. As soon as I realized it was happening, it was already bad. You have to bailout and stabilize your situation (buoyancy etc) focus on what you must do to survive the next minute. I think a reasonable minimum is three minutes at a very high sac rate that are just "lost" trying not to panic/die. Then enough to travel to your rich mix without ascending overly fast.
Then you have to take a little time and do all you can to lower your heat rate and respirations, all those relaxation games:Smile, breath deeply, but with a passive exhale, Think happy thoughts, envision your heart slowing down etc. If the hit didn't come from a complete loop failure, flush and try gingerly to get back on the loop. It took me a few trys to get back on the loop. Try--bail out etc. You have been slowly ascending during this time if possible, if you haven't time to go. At this point one would asses ones decompression obligation and gas available. Tell yourself you are going to be just fine, think of any alternative solutions--Your buddy, sending a bag up for more gas, doing as much deco as you can, surface grab some more gas and do some more deco. Fix your loop and get back on it. Even if its badly compromised, perhaps you can do two breath SCR and extend your gas that way once you have settled down a bit.
While the Shaw video is stark, I think the lesson there has more to do with
equipment failure (not assembled right) and failure to recognize something was wrong until it was too late. In his case my opinion is that the dive was not survivable with the rebreather miss assembled, in that once the problem started the depth etc made it instantly mentally disabling --he was so impaired he didn't have the tools to help himself.
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