I'm certainly not knocking the guy. How this went down is totally normal. Vac modulator and detent throttle pressure cable always needs adjusting after install. He did a bench build as I understand it, and you installed it yourself right? If the guy is like me, he has parts to several transmissions at his disposal and they do sometimes get mixed in. Obviously he didn't forget the mod valve if you seen him take one out. Mod valves aren't something that usually wear out, but if the one he swapped had a burr on it, then it wouldn't move so he swapped it. You don't see things that can be wrong with most valves. Unless you use a micrometer on each and every valve, you'd never know. Experience comes in when you KNOW which valves will frequently wear and you measure those ones everytime or replace them everytime. Being this valve doesn't normally wear, he likley didn't measure it and I woudln't have either. With your above explanation, I think he did just fine and I'm sure he did a good job. I notice you got a reman conveter. Some shops just flush them out. New converter tells me, he likley did a thorough job, but as you said, you never know. This is whey when I build a transmission, I normally put all the replaced parts in a small box, even the soft parts along with the hard parts. When the customer comes to pick up the transmission, I'll go thru the parts with them and explain what I found, what was broke, what was wore, what was good etc. This way they see all the seals were replaced, clutches replaced, why the hard parts needed replaced that were replaced so the customer can be confident they got a good thorough job. If I'm putting my name on it, its going to be done right or I won't do it at all. I won't even do patch jobs when asked ot do so. The biggest part of a build is the labor. You're going thru the same motions to put good used parts in it as you would brand new parts. To save the $100 on using used parts for the same labor just isn't worth putting my name on. Granted, I have accumulated some good used parts from rebuilding transmissions in the past, and I will buy a reseal kit for $15 and build my own transmission out of used cluthes for a back up vehicle or a vehicle that I might be selling, but even then, I know how to tell when parts are reuseable and will still work for years and many thousands of miles or I woudln't even waste my own time. I think you did just fine Calidude!!!