ASVAB Automotive Information Practice Test 582684 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.34
Score 0% 67%

Review

1

Which of the following is not a common vehicle cylinder arrangement?

49% Answer Correctly

V-type

opposed

vertical

inline


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 transfers the torque from the transmission to the drive wheels at a constant speed while accomodating the up and down movement of the suspension?

68% Answer Correctly

constant velocity (CV) joint

springs

control arms

transfer case


Solution

Constant velocity (CV) joints are located at both ends of a half shaft and their purpose is to transfer the torque from the transmission to the drive wheels at a constant speed while accomodating the up and down movement of the suspension. The inner CV joint connects the shaft to the transmission and the outer CV joint connects the shaft to the wheel.


3

The primary purpose of the muffler is to:

76% Answer Correctly

reclaim unburned fuel

quiet exhaust

cool the exhaust

remove harmful gases from the exhaust


Solution

The muffler follows the catalytic converter and absorbs sound to help quiet load exhaust. It is followed by the exhaust pipe which is the final exit point for exhaust gas from the vehicle.


4

What is the large casing that contains the cylinders and many of the internal components of the engine?

82% Answer Correctly

transmission

engine block

chassis

manifold


Solution

The engine (or cylinder) block is the large casing that contains the cylinders and many of the internal components of the engine.


5

Ignition timing is measured in number of degrees:

59% Answer Correctly

after top dead center

after bottom dead center

before bottom dead center

before top 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.