I got the bass back from the repair guy last night. I'm not exactly happy...of course I didn't notice most of this until I got it home in the light.
First, the body was covered with a general smegma, most of which cleaned up, but some seem to be more like fine scratches on the finish. I'm not really too picky about things like that usually - instruments are meant to be played & wear/tear is just something that happens. However, it wasn't like this when I dropped it off.
Second, he left my strap at his house. He gave me another black strap with the same type of strap locks, but mine were black & his were chrome. Not a huge deal, but...
When he handed me the bass I could tell the nut slots weren't deep enough & asked him to cut them deeper he started ranting about how they were cut the correct depth for proper intonation...uh, yeah. If the nut height has that much effect on intonation, either they're not angled correctly or they're WAY too deep. They were way too deep.
So as I'm fixing his E36 M3ty job on the nut, I discover 1.) the nut isn't flush with the slot on one end, 2.) he broke a chunk of the fretboard/headstock off of the other end, 3.) he scratched up the headstock(granted it's just rattle-can Rustoleum flat-black, but...), 4.) he didn't follow my instructions for the string spacing.
Needless to say I won't be back. Which is a shame as the next closest guy is 70-miles away. At least he's an actual pro from Nashville.
Oh, and he told me the neck needed shimmed, so he sent me home with a little piece of plastic for it. I used it for now, but eventually I'll sand down a piece of wood with the proper taper.
So after that, adjusting the truss rod, and filing the nut slots to the correct depth, it doesn't play too bad. Although with the string spacing not correct it's definitely a bit awkward. I'll spend some more time with it & decide if I can adapt to it, or if I need to take it to the other guy to have another nut cut for it.