Warming up another liter (2%) water on the skin shouldn't be that much of a dent in lowering the core body temperature. We are not flushing the warm water out anyway. We are letting the cold water in, warming it up, keeping that warm water inside the suit & letting the air out.
To sound a bit less glib and more constructive (because this is one of those things that makes my eye twitch when I hear instructors imparting this "wisdom" on their students, who will then go out into the wild to repeat this)...
All systems go from a state of order to a state of disorder. This is an eternal truth. Eggs don't unbreak. Logs don't un-burn in a fire. And heat dissipates, it never, ever concentrates without expending energy to make it do so.
You are not "warming" the water in your wetsuit (or, in this example, the drysuit). You are losing heat to it. That water will, in turn, also start to lose heat to any surrounding media. In the case of a wetsuit, that media is a layer of lycra, then air-filled neoprene, then another layer of lycra, then the surrounding water. The air-bubbles of the neoprene are providing a layer of insulation against the surrounding water. This happens less effectively at depth considering the air-bubbles get smaller at depth (ever notice how water at depth seems colder, even when there's no thermocline?).
Given enough time a 98.6 degree, live person in a 7mm wetsuit in 70 degree water will be a dead 70 degree body in a wetsuit where every tiny airspace is 70 degrees in 70 degree water.
If you flood a drysuit there is no insulating layer at all. You are, effectively, naked in 70 degree water. And going to freeze to death. Soon.
S = k log W
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