Definition
An engine instrument reading that falls outside the normal operating range published by the manufacturer, signaling that one or more engine parameters — such as oil pressure, oil temperature, cylinder head temperature, fuel flow, fuel pressure, manifold pressure, or RPM — is no longer behaving as expected and may indicate a developing or active engine problem.
Plain English
An engine gauge is showing a reading that is too high, too low, or otherwise not normal, suggesting something may be wrong with the engine.
Context Anchor
A pilot may notice this while checking engine gauges before takeoff, during climb, in cruise, during descent, or any time an engine warning light or gauge reading changes unexpectedly.
Derivation
‘Abnormal’ comes from the Latin ‘ab-’ (away from) and ‘norma’ (rule or standard), so an abnormal indication is literally a reading that has moved away from the standard or expected range.
Why Pilots Care
Early recognition lets the pilot take prompt action to protect the engine and maintain safety.
Analogy
It is like a car’s temperature gauge suddenly moving into the red. The car may still be running, but the gauge is telling you to pay attention before the problem gets worse.
Grounding Statement
If the engine still sounds normal but an oil pressure reading suddenly drops, the pilot treats the reading seriously until it is checked and explained.
Intuition Check
Do not assume an abnormal engine instrument indication always means the engine has failed. It means a reading is not normal, and the pilot must determine whether the problem is the engine, the system being measured, or the instrument itself.
Example Sentence 1
During the cruise scan, the pilot noticed an abnormal engine instrument indication when the oil temperature climbed above the normal operating range.
Example Sentence 2
During the climb, an abnormal engine instrument indication on the cylinder head temperature prompted an immediate power reduction.