ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 465504 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.13
Score 0% 63%

Review

1

The joule is a unit of measurement for:

67% Answer Correctly

energy

capacitance

power

resistance


Solution

The joule is a unit of measurement for energy.


2 Use Ohm's Law to calculate the value of current in this circuit if voltage is 30 volts and resistance is 60 Ω.
80% Answer Correctly
0.5 A
2 A
1.5 A
0.55 A

Solution

Ohm's law specifies the relationship between voltage (V), current (I), and resistance (R) in an electrical circuit: V = IR.

Solved for current, I = \( \frac{V}{R} \) = \( \frac{30}{60} \) = 0.5 A


3

Capacitors are charged by what type of current?

64% Answer Correctly

direct

high voltage

low voltage

alternating


Solution

Capacitors store voltage and are used in circuits as temporary batteries. Capacitors are charged by DC current (AC current passes through a capacitor) and that stored charge can later be dissipated into the circuit as needed. Capacitors are often used to maintain power within a system when it is disconnected from its primary power source or to smooth out or filter voltage within a circuit.


4

In household electrical wiring, which color of insulation indicates the 'hot' wire?

50% Answer Correctly

white

black

red

green


Solution

In the NM cable used for wiring homes, each cable has three wires inside a sheath with each wire covered in a different color of insulation to indicate its type. The wire with the black insulation is the 'hot' wire, white is the neutral wire, and the ground wire is either covered in green insulation or left bare.


5

General current flow in a transistor is from __________ to __________.

51% Answer Correctly

base, collector

collector, emitter

collector, base

base, emitter


Solution

The transistor is the foundation of modern electronic devices. It is made entirely from semiconductor material (making it a solid state device) and can serve many different functions in a circuit including acting as a switch, amplifier, or current regulator. A transistor works by allowing a small amount of current applied at the base to control general current flow from collector to emitter through the transistor.