ASVAB Automotive Information Practice Test 499744 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.55
Score 0% 71%

Review

1

What provides the power necessary to start a car?

85% Answer Correctly

battery

powertrain control module

alternator

spark plugs


Solution

The battery supplies the power necessary to start the engine when the ignition switch is is turned on.


2

Just before the piston reaches top dead center, the spark plug fires and ignites the compressed air-fuel mixture. This describes which engine stroke?

61% Answer Correctly

power

compression

exhaust

intake


Solution

During the power stroke, just before the piston reaches top dead center, the spark plug fires and ignites the compressed air-fuel mixture. The resulting expansion due to combustion pushes the piston back down the cylinder toward bottom dead center.


3

The distributor is responsible for:

71% Answer Correctly

timing the spark and distributing it to the correct cylinder

distributing power to the correct drive wheels

utlizing battery power to start the engine

recharging the battery


Solution

The distributor is driven by the engine's camshaft and is responsible for timing the spark and distributing it to the correct cylinder. The distributor cap contains a rotor that connects the ignition coil (and its high voltage) to the proper cylinder at the proper point in the stroke cycle.


4

The catalytic converter output consists primarily of:

65% Answer Correctly

carbon monoxide

gasoline

water and carbon dioxide

oxygen


Solution

The catalytic converter converts pollutants in exhaust gas into less pollutant substances like carbon dioxide and water.


5

Which of the following is not part of an engine's cooling system?

74% Answer Correctly

coolant

radiator

air conditioner

thermostat


Solution

The purpose of an automobile engine's cooling system is to circulate coolant around the engine so it can absorb and dissipate heat. The water pump pumps coolant through the various components in the system and the radiator cools down coolant after it has heated up after passing through the engine. The thermostat controls the flow of coolant based on engine temperature while the cooling fan draws air through the radiator when the car isn't moving fast enough for unforced air to cool things down on its own.