I could totally be wrong, but from anecdotes I've read I have the impression the more likely reason for a mechanical SPG to read falsely high would be contamination inside the gauge mechanism. Not a failure of the Bourdon tube itself. More like a salt crystal or piece of grit happens to get inside and causes it to mechanically bind. That kind of failure or any type that is analogous to that seems pretty unlikely to happen to a pressure transducer.
Well, yeah, but by the same token salt water getting into WAI sensor casing could short something, perhaps the transistor responsible for calibration adjustment... It is more likely that it'll fry the whole thing though, no false readings then. I would think IRL the most likely cause for salt/water inside is mechanical damage, WAI transmitters might be more succeptible to that thanks to lifting tanks by that convenient plastic handle.