dr.occa wrote:typical vacuum at idle on most cars is ~ 20-22 in. Hg (inches of Mercury or 77 kilopascals)
Yes, and this is the amount of the vacuum, not the amount of absolute pressure.
No vacuum == atmospheric pressure - where you and me are right now
Complete vacuum == no pressure at all - outer space
They're called vacuum gauges because they measure vacuum. When they are measuring no vacuum, the pressure is atmospheric.
So taking atmospheric as 102 kPa, 77 kPa of vacuum is (102-77) = 25kPa of absolute pressure...which is exactly what my MJLJ reads at idle
Double check...
What does a mechanical vacuum gauge read when its in the open air - zero
What does an electrical vacuum gauge when it's powered up and in the open air - zero
Go find some automotive vacuum gauges on Google with a description of the values that they show...
as the car accelerates on the vacuum/boost gauge that measures inHg the indicator moves from the higher number to 0 and then psi increases on the other side of 0 in boosted applications.
Yes, exactly.... "vacuum...gauge...moves...to 0" i.e. the vacuum goes to zero/becomes less. So the absolute pressure is rising back towards atmospheric.
from what i'm getting is that MJ does the opposite and kpa numbers increase on acceleration. there's my confusion or lack of understanding.
Yes, exactly right as well.
The MJLJ measures absolute pressure.
What does a MJLJ read when its powered up and in the open air - 102 kPa
What does a MJLJ read when its powered up and engine idling - 25kPa (= 77 kPa of vacuum)
What does a MJLJ read when its powered up and an engine is at full throttle (open butterfly) - pretty close to 102kPa (= 0 kPa of vacuum)
So everything you say is entirely consistent