Ok so now that the rebreather side is dealt with, back to the original question....
SAC (or RMV) is a funny thing. Generally, it does not matter in and of itself what your SAC rate is. What is important is that you know what it is and plan accordingly.
Lets say you have a RMV of 1.0 cuft / min (that is quite high). Your buddy is 0.5 (low)
All it means is that for a given dive, you will need to carry more gas, and your buddy will have to carry more for you in case of OOG. This will lead to running out of ability to carry tanks quite soon, thus limiting the dives you can do. It will also limit your buddies, which becomes problematic when the dives start to get expensive (Helium etc)
Either go shallower, go shorter, or bring the SAC down. Generally, high SAC is a symptom not a problem, in and of itself. Usually, high SAC can be attributed to one or more of the following:
Equipment issues (drag, streamlining etc)
Technique issues (overweighting, inefficient propulsion, unnatural breathing pattern etc)
Physical issues (overweight, unfit etc)
Mental issues (discomfort / unease in the water etc)
Addressing the first two, ie getting rid of drag, getting weighting correct and using efficient propulsion, will often give a dramatic drop in SAC. That will in turn help with comfort in the water etc.
Out of interest, do you have any dives where you can get average depth, dive time and remember how much you had left on surfacing? That will give us an idea of your rough RMV and from there we can judge the scale of the problem.
SAC (or RMV) is a funny thing. Generally, it does not matter in and of itself what your SAC rate is. What is important is that you know what it is and plan accordingly.
Lets say you have a RMV of 1.0 cuft / min (that is quite high). Your buddy is 0.5 (low)
All it means is that for a given dive, you will need to carry more gas, and your buddy will have to carry more for you in case of OOG. This will lead to running out of ability to carry tanks quite soon, thus limiting the dives you can do. It will also limit your buddies, which becomes problematic when the dives start to get expensive (Helium etc)
Either go shallower, go shorter, or bring the SAC down. Generally, high SAC is a symptom not a problem, in and of itself. Usually, high SAC can be attributed to one or more of the following:
Equipment issues (drag, streamlining etc)
Technique issues (overweighting, inefficient propulsion, unnatural breathing pattern etc)
Physical issues (overweight, unfit etc)
Mental issues (discomfort / unease in the water etc)
Addressing the first two, ie getting rid of drag, getting weighting correct and using efficient propulsion, will often give a dramatic drop in SAC. That will in turn help with comfort in the water etc.
Out of interest, do you have any dives where you can get average depth, dive time and remember how much you had left on surfacing? That will give us an idea of your rough RMV and from there we can judge the scale of the problem.