Years ago I flew Puma helicopters. The main gearbox ran at a very low oil pressure when hot (I think it was 0.8 bar, about 11.5 psi) and on the pressure gauge the needle showed just under half scale deflection, so it sat almost horizontal. The gauge was probably purpose made for the aircraft, with an expanded scale.
Later MOD decided to fit a combined oil pressure and temperature gauge (before that there was just a warning caption for high oil temperature). The gauge chosen must have been an off the shelf item because the normal temperature reading was half scale but the oil pressure scale went up to something like 10 bars so at normal pressure the needle looked like it was hardly off the bottom stop. Feedback was given but the new gauges remained.
The MOD needed to borrow one of our aircraft for a trial; the test pilots weren't familiar with the type. The head test helicopter pilot obviously didn't look at the oil pressure gauge after start up. Then, as he was flying along he suddenly noticed the oil pressure needle sitting in its "normal" position. He thought he'd lost all the oil pressure (scary, tbh!) so he put out an emergency call and landed in a field! Caused some embarrassment when the RAF recovery team turned up because there was actually nothing wrong with it.

Built like a gun... could go BANG!