Double check and make sure you have the correct tpms sensors with the correct frequency for your car. They could have put on 433mhz sensors on by mistake.
Not exactly seasonal(kinda is) but I just brewed another 5 gal of Brown ale and racked 10 gallons of cider(5gals/dry 10.5% abv and 5gals/sweet@ 5.9%ABV)
Did you ever stop and wonder if one or several of their warehouses was looted and their actual inventory isnt up to date? A friend of mine that owns a repair shop was having issues for a few weeks with getting parts because several hub stores were looted which threw the entire system off.
95% of shine that comes from a detail comes from the polishing/compounding step. That other 5% or less comes from the wax/sealant. If you want it looking its best, polish it. Otherwise it wont really make much of a difference.
His products are hit and miss. Some of the quality is decent, others are horrible. Yes, he modifies OEM parts but at the same time, the pods that he uses is just 2" PVC epoxyed into place with body filler to blend.
I'm unsure about Mazda, but lots of people disable the VCM in Honda/Acura's (hondas cylinder deactivation) because of stuttering/hesitation/vibration/broken engine mounts.
I'm on my same engine for over 4 seasons. 850whp, 4 cylinder, 45psi and everything looked fine last time I broke it down for inspection. I run 20w50 vr-1. Engines last if they're built and tuned properly for their intended application.
Also what engine are you running and what clearances...
Are you running an accusump? What oil pan are you running? I'm almost willing to bet if it's not an extra capacity/baffled pan then that's your issue with wiped out bearings. Oil starvation.
Also if you have an inadequate PCV/catch can system, at high rpms, all that oil is getting backed up in...
A car show hack is pledge furniture polish as it's mostly just oils that makes the car look wet.
Besides that all the shine comes from polishing and not wax.