Heya Stuart... I totally dig what you are saying. Sorry for "busting your balls" a bit... This seems much more reasonable, with a much more gradual move into more extensive decompression.
There is a reason why you (and most) start out with a 40cuft stage tank in their AN/DP/etc course. And a little secret, it's not (only) because it's an easy to handle little light stage, and a very nice and comfortable first step into stage diving. No the real reason is that it has a very limited volume allowing the students to taste decompression after the course but not get in head over heels because the volume of deco gas prohibits very extensive deco.
Yes GUE T1 has following certification limits:
Trimix 21/35 and 18/45
50% or O² as deco gas (1 deco stage, no bottom stage)
Max depth 51m
Max deco 30 minutes
Then you have T60 which is an intermediate which extends above to 2 stages (1 bottom and 1 deco or 2 deco) and extends depth to 60m (200ft) and deco to 45 min I think
And finally you have T2 and T2plus (which is a certification but covered in T2, you don't do another course after that...) which is full trimix multiple stages hypoxic mixes.
Reason GUE does it like that at normoxic T1 level is the 1 stage. In our lost deco gas scenario's you potentially could start running into difficulties doing 45min or more on 1 stage. Since you are only taught how to handle 1 stage they limit the max deco just to prohibit your example
... What you do on your own is of course what you do on your own.
To the OP: (because I went so off topic)... I believe AN/DP is a very good entry level technical course that lets you taste from decompression diving. If the majority of your diving range (and the charters boats allow the extended time) is in this depth range I would go for it. You'll learn a lot and be able to gradually extend your range.
If after a while you see that you are really pushing the deco time to over 40 minutes I would start looking into multi stage diving and or trimix.
Cheers
B