ASVAB Automotive Information Practice Test 201491 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.20
Score 0% 64%

Review

1

For inline cylinder arrangements in an engine, how are the cylinders numbered?

50% Answer Correctly

sequentially from the back of the engine to the front

alternating from the back of the engine to the front

alternating from the front of the engine to the back

sequentially from the front of the engine to the back


Solution

Inline cylinder arrangements number cylinders sequentially (1, 2, 3, ...) front to rear.


2

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

66% Answer Correctly

V-type

opposed

inline

vertical


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.


3

The wheel __________ is the mounting point for the wheel and tire assembly.

66% Answer Correctly

shaft

base

hub

knuckle


Solution

The wheel hub is the mounting point for the wheel and tire assembly. The wheel hub can rotate while being held stable by the steering knuckle which applies the motion of the control arms to the wheels.


4

What does the timing belt do?

64% Answer Correctly

synchronizes the cam and the camshaft

calibrates the speedometer

synchronizes each piston to the crankshaft

synchronizes the camshaft and the crankshaft


Solution

Maintaining proper synchronization between the rotation of the camshaft and the rotation of the crankshaft is critical to ensure that the engine's valves open and close at the proper times during each cylinder's intake and exhaust strokes.


5

An overcooled engine:

73% Answer Correctly

generates more power

is more efficient

uses less gasoline

is less efficient


Solution

An overcooled engine is less efficient. During the power stroke, combustion heat pushes down the piston. If too much of this heat is lost to the cooling system, the fuel might not combust completely and contaminate the engine's lubricating oil diminishing its lubricating ability. Incomplete combustion of fuel also negatively affects the engine's fuel efficiency and power output.