ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 719956 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 2.70
Score 0% 54%

Review

1

In electrical wiring, which of the following are proportional?

50% Answer Correctly

the length of the wire and the amount of the current

the length of the wire and the amount of the voltage

the diameter of the wire and the amount of the current

the diameter of the wire and the amount of the voltage


Solution

Current flow through a wire increases the temperature of the wire. If too small a wire is used, the wire will heat up causing a loss in conductivity and possibly a fire. The thicker in diameter a wire is, the more current it can carry without overheating.


2

What is the voltage of most household electrical systems in the United States?

59% Answer Correctly

110V

60Hz

60V

220V


Solution

Most households use electricity with a voltage of 110V.


3

The valence shell of n insulator is how full of electrons?

56% Answer Correctly

half full

less than half full

more than half full

empty


Solution

Insulators have valence shells that are more than half full of electrons and, as such, are tightly bound to the nucleus and difficult to move from one atom to another.


4

This circuit component symbol represents a(n):

60% Answer Correctly

capacitor

resistor

inductor

transformer


Solution

An inductor is coiled wire that stores electric energy in the form of magnetic energy and resists changes in the electric current flowing through it. If current is increasing, the inductor produces a voltage that slows the increase and, if current is decreasing, the magnetic energy in the coil opposes the decrease to keep the current flowing longer. In contrast to capacitors, inductors allow DC to pass easily but resist the flow of AC.


5

Capacitors connected in series produce __________ capacitance compared to capacitors connected in parallel.

45% Answer Correctly

the same

less

no

more


Solution

Capacitors store electricity 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 connected in series produce less capacitance than capacitors connected in parallel.