All great points, thank you. It sounds like the likelihood of it happening on a BM unit are lower (assuming you keep workload to a relative minimum to reduce CO2)?High workload, increased gas density, and likely a bit of stress managing new equipment (playing with the DPV and in your course) can all attribute to CO2 buildup.
I’ve found this issue to be more common on FMCLs (increased hydrostatic WOB on the exhale) and especially units with smaller loop volumes (much easier to over breathe).
Keep work loads extremely low in the future and if you feel yourself starting to breathe hard, stop all activity and rest until it is under control, and use adequate He for deeper dives (18/45 would be a more appropriate mix for dives in the 150ft range).
Like I said, I'm relatively new to rebreather diving and the Choptima, and while it has been a great unit so far (easy to assemble and maintain), I don't love the real estate it takes up on my chest (coming from BM doubles originally). Been debating on switching to a BM unit or just continuing to build hours on the Choptima.