Ahhh.... I think you missed the part where I said "closed system". In this case the closed system is everything that is within the outer skin of the engine and touched by oil... sump, oil galleries, oil pump, cam covers. All of these share the same environment and are connected in such a way that the pressure before the oil enters the pump, and after it exits all restrictions, is the same. There is of course a pressure differential across the pump, and this differential will stay the same if the engine speed stays the same, or if the pressure within the closed system changes.
The one thing that is not within the closed system is the pressure sensor. It uses atmospheric as its reference, and measures the pressure within the closed system. In this case, it measures oil pressure on the discharge side of the pump. And as outlined above, if the vapour pressure within the closed system changes, the pressure in every part of the system changes by the same amount. The gauge reads the pressure relative to atmospheric, and will reflect the change in pressure within the closed system. That is, it will show the pressure generated by the pump plus or minus any superimposed system pressure.
In this case, I am suggesting that if someone had connected the cam cover breather to (say) a brake booster tapping by mistake, the closed system could have been pulled down to lower than atmospheric pressure. Then, when the breather tube was unplugged, and the system allowed to return to atmospheric, this was reported as an increase in pressure on the gauge.
The pump is just along for the ride
Cheers... jondee86
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