As others have said, and from my experience.
You cannot go from OC trimix straight to CCR trimix. It is strongly recommended by all training agencies that you take time to adjust to CCR diving, prior to progressing to CCR trimix.
I started with OC full (no limit) Trimix.
I did the MOD1 course. In my case, this resulted in an Air DIL, 40m limit. I don't remember there being any limitations on the decompression penalty you could run.
I did a lot of diving on the unit on shallow dives. Initially any dive over 30m I did on OC. I was even on a boat where I swapped from OC on the morning (deep) dives, to CCR for the afternoon shallow dives.
The credit I got for my OC Trimix ticket, was when I took the next ticket. I basically did a combined MOD2, and MOD3. Basic trimix theory doesn't change for OC or CCR. However, there are different dive practice's between OC and Trimix. The combined course was probably one of the most intense courses I have done, at least from the point of view of diving, in water skills and exercises. The theory was reasonably straight forward (I had a reasonable amount of trimix knowledge from my OC courses and experience), there where a few changes to planning to match the requirements and limitations of CCR practice.
From a personal point of view - I would strongly advise anyone transitioning from deep OC to CCR to spend at least a season if not longer on shallow diving gaining experience on the unit. Importantly, you are attempting to break a number of habits you have developed for OC diving. The more experience and aptitude you have in your OC diving, the harder in many ways to break those habits.
As an illustration. The introduction of the AP Inspiration (now known as the classic), resulted in an affordable CCR suddenly becoming available to UK divers. It was also manufactured by a reputable company with many years of supplying and building a reputation within the UK for good solid dive kit with good lifetime support (In particular the 'buddy' range of bcd's).
It wasn't a cheap unit to buy, but it was reasonable, especially if you where doing deep diving or trimix diving. The end result was a number of very well known and experienced divers and dive teams invested in the new technology. Despite the very strong statements to spend a season learning the unit and avoid deep dives, people quickly returned to the type of diving they had been doing. The end result was a huge spike in fatalities and diving incidence. The people getting hurt where not the inexperienced over extending themselves, but the very experienced divers. HOWEVER, they where inexperienced CCR divers. It took a while for people to finally accept that CCR is different to OC and you do need time to adjust and LEARN.
The inspiration gained the nick name YBOD (Yellow Box Of Death), during this period.
We (in the UK) have finally learnt the lesson. The experienced divers do take the time to adjust now. Also, people transition to CCR earlier in their diving, because of the healthy secondhand and therefore affordable market. This means they gain experience between each qualification, as they would if they stayed on OC.
In summary, if you chose to change from OC to CCR, welcome. Welcome to a world without bubbles, of a feeling of infinite gas and time. But PLEASE, take your time to learn the strange world of CCR diving. REMEMBER on OC a fault or issue is normally immediate. On CCR it slow and can creep up on you if you are not paying attention to the unit and the PO2. The upside is you normally have time to analyse and resolve the issue
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Gareth