I've been working on a berm in the back north west corner of the property to both clean up thistle, buckthorn and other **** as well as provide a bit of a privacy screen. It's about 4' tall and 40' long, curved and sloping off to each side. Our plan is to cover it with low maintenance flora. Most of the dirt came from the excavation on the patio - thick nasty clay. It settled over the winter and we've now covered it with geotex and fresh new top soil on top of that.
The north side of my house has a ton of pachysandra which is hearty and thriving here:
My friend, the Ditch Witch Machine, makes transplanting it in big chunks easy; roughly 3' x 4' sections with 6+" of soil going with it:
The front area will be seeded as we did in the south west corner a couple of years ago.
After a machine grade, I hit it by hand with a big grading rake, spread a layer of grass seed, then raked it again lightly, added some more seed, then dropped a blanket of straw:
We're watering it twice daily.
I'm also trying hard to get the garden done. Trying and failing; but not without some progress:
I have more to plant and should wrap that and the irrigation up this next weekend. Then it is back to trenches, drains and pipe on the north side of the house to complete the entire drainage system.
Garage stuff?
Time for an oil change.
When Porsche's 964s left the factory, they were filled with either Shell TMO or Mobil 1. The 964 came to me with a fresh oil change and Mobil 1 15w50. While a solid, respectable choice, I wanted something a bit more specific for an aging air-cooled engine. The oil world, in seemingly every situation, calls for debate and argumentation perhaps exceeding the Ford/Chevy silliness. Debates over oil, brand and weight, in air-cooled Porsches are no different. Over time, data and new products change conventional thinking. Even Porsche has evolved their approach and now recommends
and sells a Porsche branded 10w60 for classic air-cooled motors over 3.0 liters.
My approach has been do my research, find what fits given the data and use case at that time, and press play. On the first oil change I moved from Mobil 1 to PennGrade 1 20w50. A proverbial sh!t ton of internet research leading me to believe the slightly higher ZDDP package in the PennGrade was better suited to the car - better anti-wear chemistry. I was probably also swayed by some personalities whom I know have way more experience, ergo wisdom, with Porsches than I do. The increased Zinc content specifically helps with things like flat tappets.
This spring, I decided upon another change, from the PennGrade to
Driven DT50 in a 10w50 weight. My climate and use, together with strong on-line reviews, lead me to this. Typically, I am a "if it ain't broke don't fix it" kind of guy. The PennGrade did nothing wrong, I have zero issues with it. However, there might now be something better that seems to be standing the test of time and internet scrutiny and scorn.
I also replaced the magnetic drain plugs - plural, yes there are two, one on the engine case and one between the oil tank (near the engine) and the oil cooler (front mounted), with 'farkle-ish'
Rennline magnetic plugs. I've stuck with the OE Mahle filter.
The car had leaked small amounts (a few drops a week) since day 1 of my tenure; some were known and some were discovered during the PPI. Typical stuff, drops, not tablespoons or cups, normal and almost reassuring. Almost. I'm 85 miles and 5 days post change and not a drop; we'll see what things look like this weekend. Still, a full rebuild is somewhere down the line...man that is a deep and wide rabbit hole.
She also burns some oil - in fact, Porsche’s factory specification for the M64/01 engine allows for oil consumption of up to 1.5 liters per 1,000 kilometers (roughly 1 quart per 622 miles). After 6,067 miles, I'm averaging 679 miles per quart. Not unexpected or out of spec for a 112,*** mile motor.
I'm still happy with the jack stands and jack I bought a few years back:
She's also thirsty. With the car hot, up level on Jack stands, and left to drain for a half an hour, she drained well. I was able to return 10.75 quarts to the 12.1 quart system, although I may have been 1/2 a quart low at the start.
Sláinte! 