ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 735850 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 2.96
Score 0% 59%

Review

1

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

50% Answer Correctly

red

white

black

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.


2

Current is the rate of flow of electrons per unit time and is measured in:

69% Answer Correctly

coulombs

amperes

ohms

volts


Solution

Current is the rate of flow of electrons per unit time and is measured in amperes (A). A coulomb (C) is the quantity of electricity conveyed in one second by a current of one ampere.


3

This circuit diagram represents a(n):

69% Answer Correctly

open circuit

series circuit

parallel circuit

series-parallel circuit


Solution

A series circuit has only one path for current to flow. In a series circuit, current (I) is the same throughout the circuit and is equal to the total voltage (V) applied to the circuit divided by the total resistance (R) of the loads in the circuit. The sum of the voltage drops across each resistor in the circuit will equal the total voltage applied to the circuit.


4

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

45% Answer Correctly

more

no

less

the same


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.


5

What is the primary difference between a rectifier and an inverter?

61% Answer Correctly

a rectifier strips out the DC portion of electricity while an inverter strips out the AC portion

a rectifier converts an AC input to DC while an inverter converts a DC input to AC

a rectifier strips out the AC portion of electricity while an inverter strips out the DC portion

a rectifier converts a DC input to AC while an inverter converts an AC input to DC


Solution

A diode allows current to pass easily in one direction and blocks current in the other direction. Diodes are commonly used for rectification which is the conversion of alternating current (AC) into direct current (DC). Because a diode only allows current flow in one direction, it will pass either the upper or lower half of AC waves (half-wave rectification) creating pulsating DC. Multiple diodes can be connected together to utilize both halves of the AC signal in full-wave rectification.