Definition
The manifold pressure value equal to the standard atmospheric pressure at sea level, approximately 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). In turbocharged engine discussions, it is used as the reference point against which boosted manifold pressures are compared.
Plain English
The pressure of the air going into the engine when it equals the normal pressure of the air at the surface of the ocean — about 29.92 on the manifold pressure gauge.
Context Anchor
Seen in turbocharged engine discussions, especially when comparing an engine that loses power with altitude to one that can maintain sea-level intake pressure during climb.
Derivation
“Manifold” comes from an older word meaning “many-fold” or “having many parts.” In an engine, the intake manifold is the passage that sends air to the cylinders. “Sea level” gives the pressure reference: the air pressure normally available near the level of the ocean.
Why Pilots Care
Shows whether a turbocharged engine is still producing its maximum rated power at altitude, directly affecting takeoff, climb, and cruise performance planning.
Grounding Statement
As the airplane climbs into thinner air, the turbocharger can compress the intake air so the engine still breathes as if it were near sea level.
Intuition Check
“Sea level” does not mean the airplane must actually be at sea level. It means the manifold pressure is being held near the pressure normally available at sea level, not automatically boosted above the engine’s normal sea-level rating.
Example Sentence 1
The turbocharger maintained sea level manifold pressure all the way up to the engine's critical altitude.
Example Sentence 2
Altitude turbocharging systems are designed to hold sea level manifold pressure up to a much higher critical altitude than ground-boosted systems.