@Nico-ITA Just my opinions here:
What the people around me dive would be a factor in my decision. But, it would be a low priority factor.
The last few times I've been on boats for tech dives, it has been almost all CCR divers. 1 OC diver on the last 6 pack I was on. 2 OC divers on a boat that had 12 divers.
Of the CCRs, there were all different types. APD, rEvo, Meg, Hollis, and probably at least one that I'm forgetting. I have dived quite a bit on my rEvo with a buddy that used to have a JJ and upgraded himself to an X.
To ME, being in the water with a buddy that has the same unit as I do doesn't really matter much. The benefit of having the same unit as your buddies is more to do with out of the water. You have an issue. Do you not know how to diagnose or fix it? But maybe a buddy does because he has the same unit. Or maybe you need a spare part that you don't have. Maybe your buddy does.
If you really learn your unit well and carry adequate spares, the benefit of having buddies on the same unit is not all the big a deal.
What could be a big deal is being able to get training. It does you no good to buy a unit if you can't find an instructor that you're able to get to and get scheduled with.
I haven't run into instructors that push an agency. Though I will say I've not ever talked to a GUE CCR instructor, really. Anyway, a CCR instructor is an instructor with whatever agency (or agencies) they are an instructor for. I would not care too much about that. Generally, the manufacturer is going to dictate the standards for what must be taught on a given unit and you'll get the same basic training from any instructor for that unit. (again, GUE being a potential exception to that) So, pick a good instructor. Don't worry about the agency.
I already posted a bunch of things to rebut some of what has been said to knock the rEvo (by people none of whom are certified on a rEvo, I don't think). rEvo is very different from the canister style units like the JJ/Meg/X. Apparently, without spending some time on one, some of its benefits are not able to be fully grasped by some people.
It SEEMS, from what I read and hear people talk about, having a CO2 hit is one of the biggest risks in CCR diving. I think that the rEvo design of the scrubber virtually eliminates that concern. As long as you don't use exhausted sorb, of course. I think the rEvo scrubber design is significantly safer than any of those canister design scrubbers, for avoiding a CO2 hit. There is no O-ring you can leave out, or spacer you can leave out, that could result in bypass. There is no single container of sorb in the rEvo scrubber that could develop a channel that resulted in bypass. There is even a rumor that the rEvo has been tested with an artificial channel created in both scrubbers and it was found that the gas mixing that occurs between the 2 scrubber baskets results in even that double artificial channel yielding almost undetectable CO2 buildup for the user.
The fact that rMS also lets you use your sorb much more efficiently is another benefit, but that is a benefit of cost, not safety. Without rMS, you have to change your sorb more often, which costs more. But, the rEvo still doesn't use as much as a unit that has to replace 6 pounds because they consumed 2. You replace 3 when you have consumed 2.
The most common knock on the rEvo is that it is not flood tolerant. You should ask those critics exactly what they mean by that. As far as I know, what they mean is that, if you get water inside a rEvo, you cannot get it out again during the dive. And that is true.
But, what does it really mean for a rEvo diver? First, I must preface this with, this is my perspective as a non-cave diver. My fun dives are on wrecks. My long dives are 2 hours, so far. So, what I might find annoying at the 2 hour mark, might be a MUCH bigger deal if it continues for 4 or 6 hours. If you are aiming to eventually get to the point of doing 6 hour cave dives, then my priorities or values on all this might not be good ones for you to have. For me, I expect to be doing longer dives - maybe even 3 or 4 hours. But, being outside of a cave, if I do a 3 or 4 hour dive, it's likely to be something relatively shallow, with relatively little deco involved. Or start deep and working shallow. Deep wreck dives longer than 2 hours means you are generally doing a LOT of deco for a relatively few extra minutes on the wreck.
So, what does it really mean for a rEvo diver for the rEvo to be "not flood tolerant"?
Well, first, how are you going to get water in the loop? Mostly commonly, it will come in at the DSV, for any of a number of reasons. What happens then? It goes into the exhale counter lung. If it's the amount of water that you get from water coming in around loose lips on the DSV or having a tear in the mouthpiece, then it gets absorbed by the shammy that you ought to have in there. More water than that, or if you don't have a shammy, it's just in there, making annoying gurgling noises every time you exhale. You can have a fair amount of water in there before the next thing to worry about.
If you get a LOT of water in the exhale counter lung, then it could start to get into your sorb. If that happens, then you have 2 issues. That sorb doesn't work anymore, and it creates a caustic cocktail. Fortunately, one, it's in the exhale counter lung, where a caustic cocktail doesn't hurt you. And, two, you still have a whole separate basket of sorb that is still dry and starts to get used (assuming the WHOLE exhale basket has been rendered non-functional, which would take a LOT of water). Also, if you have rMS, it would even tell you that you are now using the second basket of sorb. If you have been totally not paying attention and don't realize you have a bunch of water in the exhale lung, you ought to be able to recognize that now!
Another thing to note about the subject of getting water in the rEvo exhale counter lung is that there is only one nut and set of O-rings that you connect and disconnect that would leak and allow that. That is where the breathing loop hose connects to the unit itself. In contrast, units like a Meg or X have twice as many hoses in the breathing loop, with the same connection to the unit, plus 2 more connections with O-rings where the 2 hoses on each side connect to their counter lungs. Many more connections and O-rings to allow leaking, as compared to the rEvo.
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