Yeah! I've lived in Irvine for the past couple years, and just bought a condo in Orange just a little West on Chapman from Jamboree. We have a 2 car garage and a 2 car driveway now! It will be a godsend when everything is setup. It is a straight shot for me to head up into Santiago now

Living ~1 hour without traffic from my dad's garage has put a damper on working on the cars a bit which made all the failures even that much more frustrating, but it is a lot nicer than Fontucky area. Just expensive as hell. Next move for me may very well be to the Carolinas where I can put up a barn and own a brand new house on an acre for 2/3 what I paid for a condo. I dream of having a chassis dyno in my backyard to start dicking around with, and a nice little clean room to build engines. It is like heaven out there for drag racing too.
Oil I keep right around full on the dipstick. I notice a lot more oil consumption when overfilled, and my concern is I don't really know where it is going. I don't want to be ingesting oil. I recently vented my PCV and my oil control got a LOT better. I just stuck a filter vent in the oil fill cap for now I'm not even running a catch can. I've only puked oil that one canyon drive I did where oil got SUPER hot, and I was overfilled. Next time I'll wrap a rag with a zip tie and see how it does.
I do put at least a half quart to 1 quart extra when I know I'm really going to hammer on it. I just dump whatever partial open bottle of oil I keep in the bins for top ups so the amount varies. I used to have stable oil pressure down until 1 quart low, but with the slicks I've seen flutters both turning and in a straight line with as little as 2/3 low. This thing really boogies on the street now. The real reason for the dry sump is the LS7 build and the RPM I want to turn, which to sum up in a couple words is just pure ignorance.
I definitely had to Uber to work a couple times this year when I only had my RX7 to drive lol...it rained fairly often at the start of the year.
Brake pads I'm actually having great luck with EBC Yellows other than I went through the fronts in 3000 miles. They don't squeal, they work from cold, and I've thrashed them very hard on Angeles Crest and I lived to talk about it. There's just not enough pad area to get sufficient service life, and the rotors are too small. Unfortunate law of physics is that velocity is far more impactful than mass when it comes to stopping vehicles. The light weight helps, but the speed is what gets you.
I did pick up a set of 4 piston Cayman S calipers for a steal from a Porsche dismantler. I'm going to try and put together a budget kit at some point...if I use a production CX9 rotor I'll have less than $1000 into them including 12k mile calipers. The calipers are way bigger than I expected though and I think I'll still have clearance issues with my RPF1's. I still have some of my old Stoptech excel spreadsheets used to science out piston sizes and such, and they're actually a surprisingly good match for the car with the 949 master cylinder for fluid volume, and brake bias will be close enough to keep using the factory prop valve if I move the rear caliper out a bit.