ASVAB Mechanical Comprehension Practice Test 111500 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.55
Score 0% 71%

Review

1

Friction between two or more solid objects that are not moving relative to each other is called:

74% Answer Correctly

gravitational friction

dynamic friction

static friction

kinetic friction


Solution

Static friction is friction between two or more solid objects that are not moving relative to each other. An example is the friction that prevents a box on a sloped surface from sliding farther down the surface.


2 What is the mechanical advantage of this inclined plane if the length of the ramp is 12 ft. and the height of the green box is 2 ft.?
82% Answer Correctly
18
6
7.5
12

Solution

The mechanical advantage (MA) of an inclined plane is the effort distance divided by the resistance distance. In this case, the effort distance is the length of the ramp and the resistance distance is the height of the green box:

MA = \( \frac{d_e}{d_r} \) = \( \frac{12 ft.}{2 ft.} \) = 6


3

The standard unit of energy is the:

73% Answer Correctly

Horsepower

Joule

Watt

Volt


Solution

The Joule (J) is the standard unit of energy and has the unit \({kg \times m^2} \over s^2\).


4

What defines the mechanical advantage of a first class lever?

65% Answer Correctly

input force

output distance

position of the fulcrum

output force 


Solution

A first-class lever is used to increase force or distance while changing the direction of the force. The lever pivots on a fulcrum and, when a force is applied to the lever at one side of the fulcrum, the other end moves in the opposite direction. The position of the fulcrum also defines the mechanical advantage of the lever. If the fulcrum is closer to the force being applied, the load can be moved a greater distance at the expense of requiring a greater input force. If the fulcrum is closer to the load, less force is required but the force must be applied over a longer distance. An example of a first-class lever is a seesaw / teeter-totter.


5

What type of load doesn't create specific stress points or vary with time?

60% Answer Correctly

concentrated load

impact load

static uniformly distributed load

non-uniformly distributed load


Solution

A concentrated load acts on a relatively small area of a structure, a static uniformly distributed load doesn't create specific stress points or vary with time, a dynamic load varies with time or affects a structure that experiences a high degree of movement, an impact load is sudden and for a relatively short duration and a non-uniformly distributed load creates different stresses at different locations on a structure.