ASVAB Mechanical Comprehension Practice Test 45684 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 2.75
Score 0% 55%

Review

1

According to Boyle's law, for a fixed amount of gas kept at a fixed temperature, which of the following are inversely proportional?

63% Answer Correctly

pressure, volume

density, volume

volume, mass

pressure, density


Solution

Boyle's law states that "for a fixed amount of an ideal gas kept at a fixed temperature, pressure and volume are inversely proportional".


2 If you have a gear train with three gears, the first with 30 teeth, the second with 12 teeth, and the third with 6 teeth, what is its mechanical advantage?
51% Answer Correctly
1
5
10
4.5

Solution

The mechanical advantage of a gear train is its gear ratio. The gear ratio (Vr) is the product of the gear ratios between the pairs of meshed gears. Let N represent the number of teeth for each gear:

Vr = \( \frac{N_1}{N_2} \) \( \frac{N_2}{N_3} \) \( \frac{N_3}{N_4} \) ... \( \frac{N_n}{N_{n+1}} \)

In this problem, we have three gears so the equation becomes:

Vr = \( \frac{N_1}{N_2} \) \( \frac{N_2}{N_3} \) = \( \frac{30}{12} \) \( \frac{12}{6} \) = \( \frac{30}{6} \) = 5


3

Which of the following statements about this pulley configuration is false?

48% Answer Correctly

Changes the direction of and multiplies the effort force

This is a block and tackle pulley configuration

Only multiplies the effort force

Mechanical advantage is the number of ropes that support the resistance


Solution

A block and tackle is a combination of one or more fixed pulleys and one or more movable pulleys where the fixed pulleys change the direction of the effort force and the movable pulleys multiply it. The mechanical advantage is equal to the number of times the effort force changes direction and can be increased by adding more pulley wheels to the system. An easy way to find the mechanical advantage of a block and tackle pulley system is to count the number of ropes that support the resistance.


4 The radius of the axle is 5, the radius of the wheel is 6, and the blue box weighs 40 lbs. What is the effort force necessary to balance the load?
53% Answer Correctly
33.33 lbs.
7.2 lbs.
6 lbs.
30 lbs.

Solution

The mechanical advantage of a wheel and axle is the input radius divided by the output radius:

MA = \( \frac{r_i}{r_o} \)

In this case, the input radius (where the effort force is being applied) is 6 and the output radius (where the resistance is being applied) is 5 for a mechanical advantage of \( \frac{6}{5} \) = 1.2

MA = \( \frac{load}{effort} \) so effort = \( \frac{load}{MA} \) = \( \frac{40 lbs.}{1.2} \) = 33.33 lbs.


5 If the green box weighs 35 lbs. and is 9 ft. from the fulcrum, how far from the fulcrum would a 10 lbs. force need to be applied to balance the lever?
58% Answer Correctly
31.5 ft.
315 ft.
3 ft.
126 ft.

Solution

To balance this lever the torques at the green box and the blue arrow must be equal. Torque is weight x distance from the fulcrum so the equation for equilibrium is:

Rada = Rbdb

where a represents the green box and b the blue arrow, R is resistance (weight/force) and d is the distance from the fulcrum.

Solving for db, our missing value, and plugging in our variables yields:

db = \( \frac{R_ad_a}{R_b} \) = \( \frac{35 lbs. \times 9 ft.}{10 lbs.} \) = \( \frac{315 ft⋅lb}{10 lbs.} \) = 31.5 ft.