Hopefully I can add a few things to this thread based of my recent experience.
In August 2017 I started primarily diving, although I had done quite a bit before, on FRC for probably similar reasons to Conor, early freefall, easy recreational diving with low risk of decompression illness, and also to play around with reduced narcosis in deeper dives as I was getting significantly narked quite early on inhale, around 50-55m although its noticeable at 35m. I've switched back to inhale 2 weeks ago.
In terms of approach what was previously mentioned here seems to be the best. Very minimal breathup to keep up the CO2, minimal warmups, and the first half of the dive should be as close to static as possible (STA+DYN in the pool, or Freefall + ascent in depth). with this approach, 45m CWT bi-fins is not an issue at all, as soon as I worked out a few kinks in my equalization, and I feel like 50-55 is possible without any hypoxia issues.
Recreational diving is actually more of a challenge for me as its harder to maintain the inactive descents as you sometimes want to cover distance while going down if the reef isn't vertical or there is current. The second issue with recreational diving is that my breath hold, on FRC, gets significantly worse the more dives I do in a session as my dive response gets weaker and weaker. I can start a session with 1-2 2:15+ dives and after that the safe limit goes down to 1:25(ish).
That being said, from a breath hold perspective, and assuming I'm weighted properly for both exhale and Inhale diving it is much easier and safer to perform the same dive on Inhale as it would be on Exhale. I can do 10 clean 30m recreational dives over 2 mins long on inhale but can only do that on exhale for 2 dives and surface clean, which shows that my inhale breath hold is much better than my exhale breath hold. On the line with hangs; 2:30 exhale dives to 20m are quite tough, but 3:15 inhale dives to 20m are very easy and end before the effort phase starts.
From a training perspective I wouldn't necessarily recommend FRC diving to train for inhale diving except for equalization work. on one hand it made inhale hangs feel really easy and 75m variable weight dives feel like nothing... the issues lie in loosing the ability to comfortably make effort to descend. I tried a 64m CWT (match my PB) and although the dive was clean it was super hard with loads of contractions and a trachea squeeze. I've had to take a huge step back and train 40m repeats without weights in in order to get used to finning down again. This took about 6 sessions to get used to and hopefully 60 won't feel so bad next time around.
A final issue is that exhale diving doesn't seem to be sustainable, after 3 weeks of consistent diving I started waking up extremely exhausted and needing more and more rest days, as soon as I switched back to inhale I felt normal again.
So while there are some benefits I would say that overall we aren't seals, and although our potential with Exhale diving is still very high, a human's best diving capabilities will come with full lungs.