This popped into my head while I was driving home and I can't seem to resolve it. I suspect it's a matter of just not understanding what scale/measurement is being used for manifold pressure but... here we go.
For these examples I'm only talking about naturally aspirated engines.
I work on cars quite a bit and we often measure what car mechanics call engine vacuum with a gauge. It's a measurement of the (negative) air pressure in the car's intake manifold. In cars the vacuum(again a negative number) is highest at idle and decreases(increases in pressure) as the throttle opens because more air is allowed to rush in. This is measured in inches of mercury. Pretty simple to understand.
So my airplane has a manifold pressure gauge which at some point I just translated in my head as basically measuring the same thing(pressure in the intake manifold) and never really thought about it beyond that. The gauge on my plane is also measuring inches of mercury. But.... as I increase the throttle the number on the gauge goes UP and aside from operationally using it to set power I have no idea what that means. It doesn't say vacuum and there's no - indicating negative... and if it was absolute value the number should still go lower as the throttle is opened right? Surely an NA airplane engine doesn't have positive pressure in the intake manifold does it? What does this number actually mean. This is gonna bug me until I understand it now.
For these examples I'm only talking about naturally aspirated engines.
I work on cars quite a bit and we often measure what car mechanics call engine vacuum with a gauge. It's a measurement of the (negative) air pressure in the car's intake manifold. In cars the vacuum(again a negative number) is highest at idle and decreases(increases in pressure) as the throttle opens because more air is allowed to rush in. This is measured in inches of mercury. Pretty simple to understand.
So my airplane has a manifold pressure gauge which at some point I just translated in my head as basically measuring the same thing(pressure in the intake manifold) and never really thought about it beyond that. The gauge on my plane is also measuring inches of mercury. But.... as I increase the throttle the number on the gauge goes UP and aside from operationally using it to set power I have no idea what that means. It doesn't say vacuum and there's no - indicating negative... and if it was absolute value the number should still go lower as the throttle is opened right? Surely an NA airplane engine doesn't have positive pressure in the intake manifold does it? What does this number actually mean. This is gonna bug me until I understand it now.