ASVAB Automotive Information Practice Test 230360 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.33
Score 0% 67%

Review

1

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

73% Answer Correctly

strut

wheel hub

knuckle

wheel cylinder


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


2

The piston moves downward in the cylinder creating a vacuum that pulls an air-fuel mix into the combustion chamber. This describes which engine stroke?

68% Answer Correctly

exhaust

intake

power

compression


Solution

The four-stroke piston cycle of internal combustion engines starts with the piston at top of the cylinder head (top dead center or TDC) during the intake stroke. The piston moves downward in the cylinder creating a vacuum that pulls an air-fuel mix into the combustion chamber through the now open intake valve.


3

What is the function of the head gasket?

75% Answer Correctly

to seal the engine block from the cylinders

to connect the transmission to the drive train

to seal the exhaust system from the drive train

to seal the brake assembly from external contaminants


Solution

A head gasket is a gasket that sits between the engine block and cylinder heads to seal the cylinders to ensure maximum compression and avoid leakage of coolant or engine oil into the cylinders.


4

Too much air results in a __________ air-fuel mixture that burns more slowly and hotter.

57% Answer Correctly

rich

lean

heavy

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

Ignition timing is measured in number of degrees:

59% Answer Correctly

before bottom dead center

before top dead center

after top dead center

after bottom dead center


Solution

Ignition timing defines the point in time at the end of the compression stroke that the spark plug fires. Measured in number of degrees before top dead center (BTDC), the exact point that the spark plugs initiate combustion varies depending on the speed of the engine. The timing is advanced (the spark plugs fire a few more degrees BTDC) when the engine is running faster and retarded when it's running slower.