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Month: June 2025
Should I Go Trimix or Rebreather First? A Practical Guide for Technical Divers in Malta
Introduction – The Big Fork in the Road
Once you’ve completed PADI Tec40 or Tec45, you’re standing at the same crossroads every technical diver eventually faces:
Do I continue on open circuit and go trimix?
Or should I move onto a rebreather (CCR) now?Most divers don’t know which path fits their long-term goals. This guide breaks it down based on real experience in Malta’s wreck environment.
Why This Question Matters
Both trimix and CCR are incredible tools – but they serve different purposes.
The right choice depends on:
- Your goals
- Your budget
- How often you plan to dive
- Whether you want to build towards 100 m+ wreck dives
- How much you enjoy equipment and planning
Let’s break it down into the realities, not the marketing.
Option 1 – Go Trimix First (Open Circuit)
What It Is
Trimix training continues your OC journey into deeper and safer profiles by replacing nitrogen with helium.
Typical depth ranges:
- Tec50 Trimix: ~50–60 m
- Full Trimix: 70–100 m+
Why Choose Trimix First
1. You build problem-solving discipline
Open-circuit trimix forces you to:
- Track multiple gases
- Plan bailout precisely
- Handle failures with increasing decompression
- Maintain rock-solid buoyancy under narcosis reduction
It builds strong mental discipline for later CCR work.
2. Zero new life-support systems to learn
You stay with what you know:
- Twinset
- Stages
- Gas switches
- Existing protocols
This removes cognitive load compared to jumping straight into a rebreather.
3. Ideal if you dive only a few big trips a year
Trimix is straightforward for:
- Malta holidays
- Red Sea trips
- Occasional deep wreck missions
You don’t lose currency like you might on CCR if you take long breaks.
4. Cheaper upfront
No unit purchase, no electronics. Just:
- Twinset + regs
- Two stage cylinders
- Trimix training
Much lower barrier to entry.
Limitations of Trimix
- Gas costs add up, especially 60–90 m
- You’re carrying a lot of cylinders
- Short bottom times compared to CCR
- Logistics are heavy for multiple deep dives in a week
Trimix is amazing, but at some point you hit its practical ceiling.
Option 2 – Go Rebreather (CCR) First
What It Is
A rebreather recycles your gas, optimises PO₂ and dramatically improves efficiency.
You’re specifically training on the Hollis Prism 2 CCR.
Why Choose CCR First
1. Much longer bottom times
On a 70–90 m wreck, you can spend:
- Twice as long (and often more)
- With manageable deco
- Without mountains of OC gas
This is the biggest reason divers move to CCR early.
2. Huge gas savings
You’re not burning trimix every minute – you’re recycling it.
This makes deep diving far more affordable long-term.3. Reduced narcosis
Running a consistent high PO₂ means you stay sharper at depth.
Less low-viz “fog”, better awareness.4. Real progression to expedition-level diving
If you ultimately want to dive:
- HMS Southwold (70–73 m)
- HMS Stubborn (~55 m)
- Schnellboot (~65+ m)
- ORP Kujawiak / HMS Oakley (~100 m class)
- Or eventually Brittanic (120 m)
…CCR is the platform.
5. Modern training is safer and more structured
The Prism 2 is one of the most stable, predictable units for new CCR divers.
Training focuses on:
- Loop failures
- Bailout
- Realistic problem-solving
- Team behaviour
Not on “unit tricks” or shortcuts.
Limitations of CCR
- Higher upfront cost
- Electronics require discipline
- You must stay current
- More time spent maintaining the unit
- Bailout needs to be taken seriously
CCR requires a mindset shift – but for many divers it becomes their main tool for life.
Trimix vs CCR – Which Path Fits Your Goals?
Here is the straightforward comparison:
If your goals are 40–55 m wrecks, a few trips per year → Trimix first
You’ll benefit from:
- Simple logistics
- Strong OC skill refinement
- Lower initial investment
Perfect if you’re still exploring the idea of tech.
If your goals are 60–100 m wrecks → CCR first
You’ll benefit from:
- Longer bottom times
- Lower helium costs
- Greater capability and stability
- A platform you can grow with for years
If you know you want deep wreck experience, go CCR early.
If you’re not sure yet → Do Tec40/Tec45, then decide
Tec40 + Tec45 give you:
- Full foundations
- True deco experience
- Team protocols
- Gas switch discipline
You’ll know after Tec45 whether OC trimix or CCR excites you more.
What I Recommend as an Instructor (Realistically)
After 500+ hours on the Hollis Prism 2 and thousands of OC dives:
Best progression for most divers aiming beyond 60 m:
- Twinset + Intro to Tec
- Tec40 + Tec45
- Move to CCR (Prism 2)
- CCR 40 → CCR 60 → CCR 100
- Optional: OC trimix as a cross-training tool
This gives you:
- Strong OC discipline
- Early CCR experience
- A safe path to serious wreck diving
- The ability to do long deep dives properly
This is the pathway I used myself.
Training in Malta – Why It Works for Both Paths
Malta delivers perfect environments for both:
Trimix training
- 45–60 m wrecks from shore
- Clear drills on the Cirkewwa platforms
- Smooth transitions from Tec45 to Tec50
CCR training
- Controlled shallows for loop work
- Deep walls and wrecks for 60–100 m progression
- Stable conditions for multi-day courses
- Minimal currents, predictable weather
Few places in the world offer such clean progression.
Final Decision Guide – Quick Answers
Go Trimix First If…
- You want to improve OC skills
- You dive occasionally
- You prefer a lower upfront cost
- You want to take it slow and steady
Go CCR First If…
- You want 60–100 m wreck capability
- You want longer bottom times
- You’re tired of helium bills
- You want a long-term deep diving platform
Unsure? Start with Tec40/45.
You will know exactly which path feels right.