- Thu Feb 12, 2026 7:54 pm
#332282
What specific items in that video rubbed you wrong?
Here's my stream of consciousness as I watched the video.
"Worn-out Race Mechanic"
I have, over 30 years of working on 928s come to the conclusion that there are (at least) three types of "mechanics." Those that are lazy, ignorant, criminal, or just don't give a shit. "Race Mechanics." And those that attempt to do their work and leave no evidence whatsoever that disassembly and assembly has occurred (except, for example the freshly filled-out timing belt sticker on the inside of the right-side belt cover, etc.)
On the subject of no dipstick and the lack of a hole for it "When you open up [put a hole in] the motor it's a lean running condition." Bullshit. That statement shows a complete lack of understanding of lambda control systems since about 1985.
PVD (Porsche Vehicle Diagnostics) starting ~'24 (except for 718) and now on the 992.2s is a real thing. No non-OBD-II diagnostic data is available unless you are plugged-in to the PAG mothership.
"Test Drive #1" - documenting everything that doesn't work or doesn't feel right. I always do this, now, for a 928 that I've never worked on before.
Oil Level on no-dip-stick cars: Biggest problem is that people think that "Max" is the target. (It isn't.) So, shops struggle to deliver the car with oil level right at Max. Their customers - and possibly the technicians - don't understand that is "Max" is Maximum. Not to be exceeded. It’s NOT a target. Anyone that understands "windage" should understand that. But, shops don't want to explain - or can't - that 1/2 or 3/4 on the "pixel stick" is perfectly fine and arguably better than Max. For the Turbo cars it is demonstrably true (because Porsche doesn't provide adequate crank case ventilation for the FI cars.)
All that - oil level NOT at Max - is true for 928s too and especially true for blown 928s.
It is a PITA to get the oil fill level right.
On the 718 forum we've started the process of data gathering with "code readers" so that we can use the raw sender measurement to determine the proper cold fill level for each engine type. This, because with the 718s getting the level display in the dash requires warming up the engine, standing on one leg while rubbing your head and not opening the hatch.
Battery drain on modern cars: Always connect your battery charger when using a diagnostic tool to read codes or reset the service intervals (etc.) Parasitic drain: Starting with the 991 there are very few traditional relays. There is a software driven "relay block" that takes the place of most of the relays. Without knowing what the software is supposed to do (the software requirements which PAG doesn't publish) it's very hard to figure out what's wrong.
Software defined behavior makes it fiendishly difficult to diagnose problems.
Batteries: His 4-year replacement schedule for batteries is bizarre. If it's a car that get's driven a couple of hours per week? Sure. That's death on a battery. For a car that get's driven an hour to work and back 5 times per week? 6 years of you are paranoid. 8 years if you're not. I find that the Porsche batteries (made by Banner) last longer than anything you buy at AutoZone et.al. For cars that get driven occasionally: keep it on a battery tender. For that regimen I find that the Banner batteries will last for 10 years minimum.
Brake fluid every year? I suppose. But every two years? Yes. Must do.
Hanlon’s Razor: Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
Heinlein’s Corollary: Never underestimate the power of human stupidity.
The Reddit Conjecture: Sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice.
Worf’s Razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which is adequately explained by laziness.
Worf’s Identity: Sufficiently advanced laziness is indistinguishable from stupidity
Worf's Law: Once you've mitigated risk from stupidity and laziness in your endeavors, failure is usually the result of insufficient imagination.
My 928 Inspection Guide