ASVAB Electronics Information Practice Test 964654 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.15
Score 0% 63%

Review

1

Which of the following allows DC to pass easily but resists the flow of AC?

56% Answer Correctly

capacitor

semiconductor

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.


2

This circuit component symbol represents a(n):

65% Answer Correctly

fuse

capacitor

diode

potentiometer


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 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.


3

This circuit component symbol represents a(n):

72% Answer Correctly

resistor

capacitor

inductor

potentiometer


Solution

Resistors are used to limit voltage and/or current in a circuit and can have a fixed or variable resistance.  Variable resistors (often called potentiometers or rheostats) are used when dynamic control over the voltage/current in a circuit is needed, for example, in a light dimmer or volume control.


4

An engineer who wants to document an electric circuit would create which of the following?

67% Answer Correctly

a matrix

a layout

a blueprint

a schematic


Solution

A schematic is the proper name for a drawing of an electric or electronic circuit.


5

Which of the following is the same for each branch of a parallel circuit?

57% Answer Correctly

voltage

current

resistance

power


Solution

In a parallel circuit, each load occupies a separate parallel path in the circuit and the input voltage is fully applied to each path. Unlike a series circuit where current (I) is the same at all points in the circuit, in a parallel circuit, voltage (V) is the same across each parallel branch of the circuit but current differs in each branch depending on the load (resistance) present.