ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 807322 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.54
Score 0% 71%

Review

1

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

78% Answer Correctly

outer

inner

middle

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.


2

Which of the following is a difference between a circuit breaker and a fuse?

80% Answer Correctly

a circuit breaker can be reused

a fuse is cheaper than a circuit breaker

all of these

a fuse responds more quickly than a circuit breaker


Solution

Like fuses, circuit breakers stop current flow once it reaches a certain amount. They have the advantage of being reusable (fuses must be replaced when "blown") but respond more slowly to current surges and are more expensive than fuses.


3

The ohm is a unit of measurement for:

81% Answer Correctly

energy

resistance

capacitance

power


Solution

Resistance is opposition to the flow of current and is measured in ohms (Ω). One ohm is defined as the amount of resistance that will allow one ampere of current to flow if one volt of voltage is applied. As resistance increases, current decreases as resistance and current are inversely proportional.


4

Capacitors are charged by what type of current?

64% Answer Correctly

alternating

high voltage

direct

low voltage


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.


5

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

50% Answer Correctly

black

red

green

white


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.