Yeah, not really to maintain current to the fuel pump. The oil pressure switch used in the fuel pump relay circuit of a TBI system is only there to provide power to the relay in extended crank situations.
When the starter is cranked the ECM will power the relay directly - but only for 2 seconds. If, after that two second interval, the engine has not fired - the power supply from the ECM to the relay is shut down.
Obviously, there are many times when it takes longer than 2 seconds of cranking before the motor fires up. That is where the oil pressure switch comes in.
The pressure switch for an engine equipped with TBI is set to close at a much lower pressure than the switch used in a carbureted engine.
A TBI switch closes at 4 psi and a carbureted engine switch it closes at 10 psi.
So, if the engine doesn't fire up after 2 seconds (and the ECM power supply is lost) the oil pressure switch takes over. Just the cranking speed provided by the starter motor is sufficient to develop over 4 psi in the lubrication system. If a 10 psi switch were used instead of a 4 psi switch, the oil pressure developed during cranking would never get high enough to close the contacts. Consequently, the relay would not pull in and the fuel pump would stop.
At that point (when oil pressure exceeds 4 psi), the oil pressure switch closes and begins supplying an alternate source of current to the relay. This allows the fuel pump to continue to run and supply the TBI with fuel.
Eventually the engine fires and the ECM also begins to supply power to the relay. From then on - until the engine is shut off - power to the relay is available from both sources (pressure switch and ECM).
A couple of pages from the 1987 Light Truck Driveability & Emissions Manual - to help explain what I mean:
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Oh yeah, the point of all the useless information above is that I wanted you to be sure that the switch you install has a set point of 4 psi.