Ok folks. The gauge indicated boost is the pressure value relative to the ambient pressure at the gauge. The pressure in the manifold is absolute pressure. The ECU will operate the wastegate to hit the absolute pressure target value in the manifold. Near sea-level the gauge indication and absolute are very close to equal. At higher altitudes, the ambient pressure is significantly lower, so the indicated boost will be higher because the turbo must "blow" harder at the lower ambient pressure to hit the absolute pressure value. If your ion the coast of Florida at WOT, your boost gauge should read lower than the same car WOT in Denver.... This action also explains why your car will indicate different boost values on different days. If there is a high pressure front in your area, the indicated boost will be lower than on a low pressure front day. Sunny hot day, lower "indicated" boost, cloudy rainy day higher "indicated" boost. The abolute pressure (MAP) in the manifold is the SAME. Get it?