And THAT is often beyond the A&P's ability. Even the big boys get it wrong sometimes.
Example. The Cessnas used a Dukes fuel booster pump. That pumps is no longer available, so Cessna sourced a Weldon pump. It fits, the fittings all line up, and connecting it is easy. But it didn't work. The circuit uses two adjustable power resistors and a dual panel switch, to get three pump speeds for several reasons. If the engine-driven pump fails, the boost pump is turned on. There's a microswitch on the throttle mechanism on the fuel servo on the engine; at lower power settings the pump's current passes through both resistors, in series. As the throttle is opened to about 15" MP, that switch shorts one of the resistors and the pump gets more juice and speeds up, to keep up with the higher fuel demand. The other side of the duel panel switch shorts the second resistor, giving full boost for priming or for purging the air from the system after the engine runs a tank dry.
Simple? No. That Weldon pumps uses much less amperage to produce the same pressures and volumes. We could not get the resistors adjusted to get the requisite pressures on all settings. The pump wouldn't slow down enough. The lower current draw resulted in a smaller voltage drop across those resistors, so the pump got too much voltage and overpressured stuff. That could be fatal in flight. I worked it all out and asked Cessna for the right resistors, got them and put them in and adjusted everything. They should have issued an SB on it. Never saw one.
How many A&Ps check the pressures after pump replacement, and how many would know why things were haywire>?