ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 161173 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.64
Score 0% 73%

Review

1

Which of the following is the preferred method for splicing wires?

57% Answer Correctly

soldering

wire crimps

wrap in small gauge wire

screw-on connectors


Solution

Splicing is permanently joining two wires together. Splicing can be done with screw-on connectors or wire crimps but the preferred method for splicing is soldering. Soldering takes the most effort but results in a connection that is electrically and mechanically identical to the original wire.


2

Longer the electrical wires mean _______________ voltage drop.

73% Answer Correctly

complete

greater

lesser

diminishing


Solution

Electrical wires have a certain amount of resistance per foot. A longer wire means more resistance and a greater voltage drop.


3

Which of the following can conduct electricity under some conditions but not others?

82% Answer Correctly

insulator

conductor

resistor

semiconductor


Solution

Semiconductors have valence shells that are exacly half full and can conduct electricity under some conditions but not others. This property makes them useful for the control of electrical current.


4

Which of the following is the formula for calculating electrical power?

73% Answer Correctly

P = IV

\(P = {I \over V}\)

P = I2V

\(P = {V \over I}\)


Solution

Electrical power is measured in watts (W) and is calculated by multiplying the voltage (V) applied to a circuit by the resulting current (I) that flows in the circuit: P = IV. In addition to measuring production capacity, power also measures the rate of energy consumption and many loads are rated for their consumption capacity. For example, a 60W lightbulb utilizes 60W of energy to produce the equivalent of 60W of heat and light energy.


5

The conductivity of an element depends on how many electrons occupy which electron shell?

78% Answer Correctly

inner

middle

outer

first


Solution

All electricity is the movement of electrons which are subatomic particles that orbit the nucleus of an atom. Electrons occupy various energy levels called shells and how well an element enables the flow of electrons depends on how many electrons occupy its outer (valence) electron shell.