Given the recent discussion about pressure and level sensors, it seems like an opportune time to ask once again, what the heck is up with oil pressure on this engine.
There were several posts in the past where it was said that an oil pressure gauge on a 1300 was a waste of time because it would always read low. In effect, it was maintained that these engines "don't need pressure, they just depend on oil volume." This has never made any sense to me. In terms of the world of engines, there isn't a lot that's too exotic about the 1300. It uses plane bearings just like a car engine, it has a wet sump, an oil pump, and a large oil pan on the later models (like my '82).
It seems to me that an oil pressure gauge would give more useful information than an "idiot light," not even asking why they thought it was a good idea to have both oil pressure and oil level sensors register trouble through the same single light. My '89 5.0 Mustang has both a pressure gauge and a level warning light, and they complement each other very nicely.
So would somebody please enlighten me on how this understanding of how oil pressure works got out there in the first place, if there is any validity to it, and WHY?