What also needs to be considered when the topic of pushing ndl with a rich mix is: what is the benefit? How much less dive time would you have if you backed off the mix 1 or 2 percent? Those numbers seem to be relevant when trying to formulate a “reasonable” dive plan.
I would respectfully suggest that diving a mix close to 1.6 PO2 as an NDL dive is significantly more risky than doing the same dive on a leaner mix and doing the required decompression stops.
With the exception of Ocean Divers, most of my club do dives including decompression stops (they are trained and qualified to do this). Even those that choose not to do dives with compulsory decompression, will, if close to the NDL, automatically do a stop at 6m, prior to ascending for the safety stop. If they where to overrun their NDL, they are trained and capable of doing the required stops.
I struggle with the ethic's of not teaching decompression skills as part of general diving training. The OP is not the first time I have heard of divers charging towards the surface when the NDL time is close to zero, or when they have overshot the dive time and have moved into compulsory decompression. This is not helped by the attitude of some skippers who stop a diver doing subsequent if they move from NDL, to dives requiring decompression stops (not a policy practiced in the UK).
This thread has rather wondered away from the OP.