Definition
Abnormal or misleading readings on engine gauges (such as manifold pressure, fuel flow, RPM, or exhaust gas temperature) caused by ice forming in the engine's induction system. As ice restricts airflow or fuel flow into the engine, the instruments react in ways that may signal a developing problem before the pilot feels a clear loss of power.
Plain English
When ice builds up in the parts of the engine that take in air or fuel, the engine gauges start showing odd or changing readings. Those changing readings are often the first warning that ice is forming.
Context Anchor
Seen in induction icing discussions, where ice in the engine air intake can first show up as changes on the engine instruments.
Why Pilots Care
Unrecognized instrument problems can lead a pilot to misjudge engine power or condition, delaying corrective action for icing.
Grounding Statement
Ice in the engine air intake can make a healthy engine act as if it is losing power.
Intuition Check
Do not assume this means the instruments themselves are broken. Here, the instruments are showing a real engine problem caused by restricted airflow.
Example Sentence 1
A slow drop in manifold pressure with no throttle change is a classic engine instrumentation operational difficulty pointing to carburetor ice.
Example Sentence 2
The pilot recognized the engine instrumentation operational difficulties as an early warning of carburetor ice and applied carb heat.