I think you should go to the neater shop. You are obviously a very critical and meticulous person and you are already nit picking before the class starts. Heaven help you if the reg hose has a microscopic crack in it or the inflator is scratched.
You SHOULD have spent you time trying to get references from expereinced divers and picking the instructor that is better. However if a messy shop bothers you, then you better pick the neat one.
I appreciate your response. I apologize if my response hit too close to home for you. I think you misread most of what I said. Please see below.
I want to field some opinions on if I am being hard on a LDS. I do not want to bash so I am not going to name names or places. I am instead trying to get a feel for what is appropriate in the dive world.
...... The LDS I went with ..... The owner is a very knowledgeable diver and I feel that safety is important to him. He takes time to ensure that I am learning the material and was flexible with my concerns over weather. I was scheduled to my OW dives last weekend but the water temp was 51 degrees and the air temp was 30 and I asked if we could wait a week for better ambient temps.
Perhaps I could have been more specific and said that I had already completed classroom and CW dives.
- I did not berate the quality of the instructor. I think both shops offer quality, safe instruction.
- If the reg hose has a crack in it then any diver with a grain of common sense would replace it. Big cracks start from tiny ones and hoses aren't expensive.
"Ah the hell with it, it will be okay" hurts more people every day then "hmm, let's err on the side of caution and replace it."
You are free to dive with equipment that isn't maintained properly. Just as I am free to take equipment safety seriously. We all have different standards. I can afford the hose I can't afford to get injured.
I'll share with you with a mantra I tell my employees who work around equipment: "Safety takes a second, accidents are instant." I would encourage you not to teach others to disregard equipment condition.
By the time the rubber on a reg hose is cracking you can rest assured the seals are cracking and the inner liner is nearing it's service life too.
My original post was about what I should think about a messy workbench, disorganized shop, and apparent disregard for equipment. I'm not always meticulous, but I expect that when I hire a professional to do something that my life depends on that they take it as seriously as I do.