Definition
The pressure of the fuel-air mixture inside the intake manifold of a piston engine, measured against a vacuum reference rather than against the surrounding atmospheric pressure. It is displayed in inches of mercury (in. Hg) on the manifold pressure gauge and indicates how much air is being delivered to the cylinders, which directly relates to engine power output.
Plain English
It is a measurement of how hard the air is pushing inside the engine's intake pipes, taken from a true zero-pressure starting point. The higher the reading, the more power the engine is producing.
Context Anchor
Seen on engine instruments, in power setting procedures, and in maintenance checks for piston engines.
Derivation
The word 'absolute' here does not mean 'perfect' or 'total.' In measurement, 'absolute' means measured from a fixed zero point — in this case, a perfect vacuum. This distinguishes it from 'gauge pressure,' which is measured relative to the surrounding atmosphere. So 'manifold absolute pressure' means the actual pressure inside the manifold, with no atmospheric offset.
Why Pilots Care
MAP is the primary indicator of engine power output; pilots use it to set throttle, mixture, and to detect induction system problems that could cause power loss or engine damage.
Intuition Check
“Absolute” does not mean perfect here. It means the pressure is measured from a fixed zero point: complete vacuum.
Example Sentence 1
The pilot reduced manifold absolute pressure to 24 inches before lowering the propeller RPM for cruise.
Example Sentence 2
A sudden drop in MAP after takeoff prompted the pilot to suspect an intake manifold leak.