True, because the pressure inside the hardhat dropped to 1 ATM because of the failure. The external pressure then forced the diver into the hardhat. The end result was kinda messy. I've even heard tales of divers exiting through the air hose.In the early days of hard hat diving, with no check valves in place, when the surface compressor failed, the diver was crushed into a sloppy mess into the hard hat.
Nope. Cannot happen. The drysuit is not connected to the surface.Same deal in the drysuit without air to equalize the pressure.
Your body is not compressible (mostly water) and there is already compressed air in the lungs. Because of that there is no pressure gradient either: water pressure and the breathing air/gas pressure cancel each other out. Thus, there won't be any nasty crushing or suction (some skin damage and mental breakdown possible).
Now, please, google "Delta P" for dangers caused by pressure gradients.
The drysuit will not contain an 1 ATM atmosphere. If your drysuit would have an air hose to the surface, and you would be sufficiently deep, up you would go. Through the air hose, I suppose.
In this sense, failing surface supplied air equipment can be more dangerous than SCUBA gear, although, in other hand, it gives you a seemingly endless supply of air.