ASVAB Automotive Information Practice Test 129624 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.38
Score 0% 68%

Review

1

What cylinder arrangement would be most common in a four cylinder front-wheel drive vehicle?

66% Answer Correctly

inline

vertical

opposed

V-type


Solution

Cylinder number and arrangement depends on the purpose of the engine. Smaller (four and six cylinder) engines in front-wheel drive vehicles often use an inline design which orients cylinders vertically over the crankshaft and aligns them in a row. Other common orientations are a horizontal/opposed design which places cylinders flat facing each other with the crankshaft between them and a V-type design common in six and eight cylinder engines that features one cylinder head per block of cylinders oriented at a 60 to 90 degree angle to each other with the crankshaft at the bottom of the V.


2

Which of the following is not a function of the oil pan?

62% Answer Correctly

acts as the engine oil reservoir

cools engine oil

screens debris from oil

feeds the oil pump


Solution

The oil pan contains the engine oil reservoir of from four to six quarts of oil and feeds the oil pump through the oil pickup tube. An oil strainer floats at the top of the oil in the oil pan and screens debris from the oil before feeding it to the oil pump.


3

The right front wheel of your front-wheel drive car drops into a pothole and the left front wheel doesn't lose contact with the road. Which of the following is true?

75% Answer Correctly

your car has an independent front suspension

your car has an independent rear suspension

your car has a rigid axle rear suspension

your car has a rigid axle front suspension


Solution

An independent suspension allows the wheels on either side of an axle to move independently from each other. The fact that the left front wheel didn't move up in response to the right front wheel moving down is evidence of this.


4

Too much fuel results in a __________ air-fuel mixture that burns quicker and cooler.

63% Answer Correctly

rich

heavy

lean

light


Solution

The stoichiometric ratio defines the proper ratio of air to fuel necessary so that an engine burns all fuel with no excess air. For gasoline fuel, the stoichiometric ratio is about 14.7:1 or for every one gram of fuel, 14.7 grams of air are required. Too much air results in a lean air-fuel mixture that burns more slowly and hotter while too much fuel results in a rich mixture that burns quicker and cooler.


5

What combines the suspension spring and shock absorber into one unit?

73% Answer Correctly

wheel cylinder

strut

knuckle

wheel hub


Solution

Because a compressed spring will ex­tend violently, shock absorbers must be used to dampen the spring’s compression and extension cycles. Struts combine the spring and shock into one unit