The holes in your seat will NOT be a problem UNLESS you wear: suntan lotion or certain skin moisturizers; eat food or drink certain beverages. Food crumbs, lotions, creams, etc. can present a problem with certain leather upholstery. Any cloth fabric with a slightly rough/fibrous surface will remove from the "holes" anything that could present a problem (other than what is mentioned above). You were using one such cloth early on in the video. It looks like you have the 18-way seats! Good choice, especially for a fit person. If you have ventilated seats, then great choice also! You do have to watch out for sitting while wearing clothing wet from "excessive" perspiration. A damp cloth will remove SOME of the perspiration. I really suggest wearing clean dry clothing, because if a person continually wears clothing wet from perspiration, the seats could take on an unpleasant odor (from bacteria that "eat" human perspiration which can be rich in a substance called urea and uric acid. Houston, being notoriously warm and damp/humid, can contribute to this "effect". Here's one thing about soaps and detergents: it's what you do AFTER treating a surface with a soap/detergent that matters. These products contain "surfactants"...which even though you wipe the surface dry, some surfactant remains behind. Surfactants attract dirt, oil, grease, etc., AWAY from the surface they are on and allow these substances to mix and go into solution with water. However, if left behind on fabric, metal, leather, glass, carpeting, etc., the surfactants begin to attract MORE dirt, oil, grease TO the surface you cleaned some time before. You may notice that if you use Windex on the inside glass, it doesn't take long for the inside glass to begin fogging up with moisture. This is because the last time you cleaned with Windex, a super-tiny layer of surfactant was left behind on the surface of the glass...and that surfactant prematurely attracts moisture onto the glass. SOOOOO....you use Windex again! The answer is: after using any surfactant, try to gently "rinse" the surface using just pure, clean water you've applied to a cloth so that it's MOIST (not soaking wet)! Dry with a clean, lintless cloth...and you might note that NOW, the glass doesn't fog up so fast. The same applies with carpet cleaners also...if you clean your carpets, they get clean, BUT they seem to get dirty faster (later on) than when they were new! So, if you shampoo your carpets, repeatedly rinse them until the rinse water is practically clear...which could require LOTS of rinses! (Ugh). When there's NO SIGN of soapy lather in the rinse water, you've don'e the job! One last thing: car air conditioning in warm, humid environments can present a mildew problem after a car is two or three years old. Ask your Porsche dealership about steps you can take to reduce the likelihood of mildew forming in the ventilation system of your car. Good luck in your life journey!
Your gas is so cheap in US. I have the same car and to fill it from empty in the UK is about £100 pounds, which currently equates to approx $126.35 dollars 😢. Still luv the vids tho - keep ‘em coming 👍
you made me want to get a porsche
Nice and clean! 📸
Thank you! Cheers!
I love the video. Keep bringing more.✨💛
Thank you for watching 🤗
Love a long video!
The holes in your seat will NOT be a problem UNLESS you wear: suntan lotion or certain skin moisturizers; eat food or drink certain beverages. Food crumbs, lotions, creams, etc. can present a problem with certain leather upholstery. Any cloth fabric with a slightly rough/fibrous surface will remove from the "holes" anything that could present a problem (other than what is mentioned above). You were using one such cloth early on in the video.
It looks like you have the 18-way seats! Good choice, especially for a fit person. If you have ventilated seats, then great choice also! You do have to watch out for sitting while wearing clothing wet from "excessive" perspiration. A damp cloth will remove SOME of the perspiration. I really suggest wearing clean dry clothing, because if a person continually wears clothing wet from perspiration, the seats could take on an unpleasant odor (from bacteria that "eat" human perspiration which can be rich in a substance called urea and uric acid. Houston, being notoriously warm and damp/humid, can contribute to this "effect".
Here's one thing about soaps and detergents: it's what you do AFTER treating a surface with a soap/detergent that matters. These products contain "surfactants"...which even though you wipe the surface dry, some surfactant remains behind. Surfactants attract dirt, oil, grease, etc., AWAY from the surface they are on and allow these substances to mix and go into solution with water. However, if left behind on fabric, metal, leather, glass, carpeting, etc., the surfactants begin to attract MORE dirt, oil, grease TO the surface you cleaned some time before. You may notice that if you use Windex on the inside glass, it doesn't take long for the inside glass to begin fogging up with moisture. This is because the last time you cleaned with Windex, a super-tiny layer of surfactant was left behind on the surface of the glass...and that surfactant prematurely attracts moisture onto the glass. SOOOOO....you use Windex again! The answer is: after using any surfactant, try to gently "rinse" the surface using just pure, clean water you've applied to a cloth so that it's MOIST (not soaking wet)! Dry with a clean, lintless cloth...and you might note that NOW, the glass doesn't fog up so fast. The same applies with carpet cleaners also...if you clean your carpets, they get clean, BUT they seem to get dirty faster (later on) than when they were new! So, if you shampoo your carpets, repeatedly rinse them until the rinse water is practically clear...which could require LOTS of rinses! (Ugh). When there's NO SIGN of soapy lather in the rinse water, you've don'e the job!
One last thing: car air conditioning in warm, humid environments can present a mildew problem after a car is two or three years old. Ask your Porsche dealership about steps you can take to reduce the likelihood of mildew forming in the ventilation system of your car.
Good luck in your life journey!
Use a small paint brush to clean crevices etc
W video. Think ima get the 2018 Macan s
Nice! It’s a great daily drive:)
What year and color is your Macan?! It’s top top tier
2022, chalk ☺️
@ incredible.. thanks for responding!
Beautiful car, considering one for my wife. 2025
She'd love it :)
Do you want my help to wash the car
dont forget taxes
Is that a Porsche macan cus my dad is gonna buy one
Yes :)
Your gas is so cheap in US. I have the same car and to fill it from empty in the UK is about £100 pounds, which currently equates to approx $126.35 dollars 😢. Still luv the vids tho - keep ‘em coming 👍
Watching from the UK 🫶 and oh my! Gas is like doubled😮
I don’t know who’s nicer you are the car