I was another privileged student of the first class, and overall I have to say the experience and content provided by
@rsingler was absolutely outstanding. I feel that I learned a tremendous amount during the class, with an emphasis on little tricks and knowledge that is generally not provided by the manufacturer service manuals. Rob's knowledge, delivery, logistical setup to produce the seminar (camera, microscope, example regulators, tooling) were all exceptional and I feel the experience was generally as good as it could have been given the very significant constraints that he had to work with (people coming in with varying degrees a regulator knowledge, all servicing different styles and models of regulators, with for most non ideal tool setups). Also of note is the impressive level of communication he provided before the course, making sure you had all the information you needed to gather the tools required to service the specific regulators you had planned to rebuild, sending you a personalized kit of goodies, etc. I think that he went above and beyond what could be expected for this first implementation of the class. Personally, the value provided when you consider the low price of admission, incredible breadth of information delivered, 22-23 hours spent on zoom (yes, for real!), effort spent communicating pre-class, is unmatched in my opinion when compared to other scuba-related classes.
Now, obviously, I do think that some things would have made the seminar even more worthwhile from my personal experience. If I had to make suggestions, they would be the following:
- Adequately prepare before the class to take maximum advantage of Rob's wealth of info and knowledge. I was under prepared myself, as in having ordered the regulator savvy book a bit late, I did not have time to read more than the first 40 pages or so beforehand. While the most relevant aspects are covered during theory parts of the seminar, having already fully read the book can only help you benefit there.
- Still on the theme of preparation, reading the service manual of your regulator(s) before is certainly helpful. One thing I really wish I had done was print out the exploded schematic of my reg from the service manual and written the part number of each o-ring needed on the drawing. I serviced an Apeks FSR + XTX200 second, and as ridiculous as this sounds, the o-rings in the manual are referenced by a number on the schematic, which then sends you to a part number at the bottom of the page which references a 10 pack of those o-rings, while the service kit itself has part numbers and drawings on the back of the packaging that reference the individual o-ring part number, which is different. So for every single o-ring, I had to look at the schematic, cross-reference the 10 pack part number, google it to find the corresponding individual part number, find that number on the back of the kit packaging and then match the o-ring to the drawing there. Suffice it to say, pretty frustrating, and obviously some advance prep would have taken care of this. Apeks: come on, what is the deal here! Obviously, this may not be an issue with other manufacturers. Also I forgot to take a picture of my reg post disassembly, which created this problem in the first place.
- Scheduling-wise, the 2-day format was quite exhausting, and I would probably have personally preferred something like 4 4-hour sessions over 2 weeks or a month time, with opportunities to work on disassembly and reassembly on your own in between class sessions, allowing you to share questions and the challenges you faced while working on your own at the beginning of the next session. Something like this perhaps: 1. Some theory and then example disassembly of piston and diaphragm first stages. Do your own disassembly after 2. Questions and issues regarding disassembly addressed, then demo reassembly and tuning of first stages. Do your own reassembly after. 3. Questions and issues, moving on to disassembly and reassembly of second stages, with relevant theory. Then do it on your own. 4 Questions and issues, and then tuning of the reassembled seconds for everyone at the same time, since the procedure is quite similar for all regulators. Just a suggestion that perhaps would have worked a bit better for me in hindsight, but I realize this may not be feasible, and also would leave regs out of order for a while for students, which may not be practical.
- This one is going to sound stupid as this is a regulator service course, but I kind of wish I had not serviced any regulator during the class, and instead paid full attention to the lecture. There was time built up to disassemble and reassemble your regulators while Rob was working on a similar one on camera, but the order in which it was done on camera was not necessarily matching the service manual for my chosen reg, and to not get confused or miss any step, I had to follow the manual, which created a bit of a disconnect and made me probably miss some valuable content. I feel that the participants who already had prior experience servicing regulators and for a reason or another chose not to service equipment during class are probably the ones who benefited most, and I wish I had opted to do that and delay my service until after the class (in the end, I didn't have any significant problem so could have done it on my own either before or after class, and paid full attention).
- Equipment-wise, regarding tooling, if you are considering the class and are concerned about this aspect, I don't think this is a major hurdle. Honestly, I felt I had way too many tools that I could have done without. Definitely get the first stage vise holder and a reasonable quality bench vise to secure the first stage, an IP gauge, etc, but other than that, I feel that most specialty tools are quite overrated and easy workarounds can be found (especially involving the famous wooden dowels). Also, if you have that capability, a number of those specialty tools can certainly be 3d printed (the ones involving low torque, or just pushing things in or out of place for example). I had also purchased a sonicator (which I could market as a super jewelry cleaner for my wife
and honestly, while this is nice to have, the simple dip in vinegar and scrubbing with a soft nylon brush had already cleaned everything almost perfectly (your experience may vary if your stuff is really crusty though...) Also, I had purchased a full set of thin wrenches (11 pieces with double ends covering 22 sizes) and yes, it actually didn't have the single one I needed (11/16 if you need to know!) Well, I also enjoy working on my road bikes, so those will be handy anyway, but still, pretty ridiculous...
Anyway, apologies for the long post. Overall it was fantastic. I would definitely do it again, and actually, I think attending the class a second time is how I would make the most out of it knowing what I do now (well, I guess it's always like that though), unless a recording of some of the key sections of the class becomes available for review later on.
Many thanks to
@rsingler for all the effort he put into this.