hoosier:
... Drager Dolphin ... was a harder to breathe than the ordinary regulator.
Is it a normal symtom on every rebreather or only in this particular brand?
Hoosier,
the WOB on rebreather varies as it does on OC regulators.
There are a variety of factors that influence the WOB such as diameter of the gas path, design of the scrubber, scrubbing media (mesh size) etc. Among them are hydrostatic differences due to the distance/difference of the diver's lung and the counterlung in the water columm.
On RBs with back mounted counterlungs inhalation effort tends to be higher, exhalation effort lower, given all else being the same. On front mounted CL rigs like many O2 CCRs it's the opposite. The least difference is in over-the-shoulder mounted CL like the Inspiration, PRISM, Meg etc. Front and back mounted CL rigs usually have a sweet spot where the lungs of the diver and rig are on the same level and hydrostatics don't cause increased resistance.
Another factor on cmf-SCRs like the Dolphin is that the CL frequently are full in order to purge gas, which means you have to overcome the OPV's cracking pressure, too.
That's quite different with mixed gas CCR where you try to achieve minimal CL volume.
Having spend some time on an Atlantis, having had the Dophin, Inspiration and MK16 in the pool and having deceided on the PRISM I can tell you either of the o-t-s configured CL breathes considerably better than either of the back mounted ones.
As for the weight, Dolphins are fairly light but require a second tank for bailout and inflation, and the before mentioned full loop tends to add some extra bouyancy compared to CCRs. Depending on the size of the twins you used to dive it should still save you some weight unless you count the lead.