Interesting, can you post any rules as you understand them...
The issue I see is if you change gasses, particularly the He/N2 ratio, because you can't do a 100% perfect flush, and most units dont have a helium sensor in the loop its basically impossible to know accurately what actual gas mix is in the loop. Given that, you can't accurately predict deco...
If you're going to keep the same inert gas ratio, then little point in changing gas mixes, just let rb inject more O2. Maybe easier to do with an ECCR...
I suspect most assume that good enough flushes / assume 100% loop gas replacement, or perhaps assume that small innacuracies in the mix will have little impact on deco
Personally I think if the loop gas composition is unknown, its an unknown risk, only way to try to (not really effective) hedge against this risk is to pad the deco, if you do this, might as well deco out on the original gas...
Has anyone got any good data on what % of the gasses get flushed on average per flush cycle? I suspect its meaningless, as theres such a variation on how good different people actually are for doing flushes...
The other issue - that may not be relevant for some/smaller dives, is sudden changes in gas mixes, e.g. IBCD, narcosis, gas density changes affecting WOB etc...
If you switch to another unit / go OC, then you CAN know the gas composition exactly i guess...