ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 727661 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.11
Score 0% 62%

Review

1

Electromotive force is another name for:

53% Answer Correctly

current

voltage

power

energy


Solution

Voltage (V) is the electrical potential difference between two points. Electrons will flow as current from areas of high potential (concentration of electrons) to areas of low potential. Voltage and current are directly proportional in that the higher the voltage applied to a conductor the higher the current that will result.


2

Which of the following is not a common type of battery?

41% Answer Correctly

power-cycle

deep-cycle

dry cell

wet cell


Solution

Direct current flows in only one direction in a circuit, from the negative terminal of the voltage source to the positive. A common source of direct current (DC) is a battery. The three most common types of batteries are dry cell (used in small devices like TV remotes), wet cell (used for cars), and deep-cycle (storage batteries used primarily for backup and emergency power).


3

Why does current in an electric circuit create heat?

77% Answer Correctly

voltage is naturally hot

the wire in the circuit burns when current passes through

heat is created when the current overcomes resistance in the wire

current is naturally hot


Solution

Current in an electric circuit creates heat when the current overcomes resistance in the wire.


4

Longer the electrical wires mean _______________ voltage drop.

73% Answer Correctly

greater

complete

lesser

diminishing


Solution

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


5

Which of the following will increase the magnetic field produced by the electric current in a wire?

68% Answer Correctly

construct the wire from conductive material

construct the wire from insulative material

wrap the wire around a ceramic core

wind the wire into a coil


Solution

A moving electric current produces a magnetic field proportional to the amount of current flow. This magnetic field can be made stronger by winding the wire into a coil and further enhanced if done around an iron containing (ferrous) core.