ASVAB Mechanical Comprehension Practice Test 483013 Results

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

Review

1

Which of the following is not a type of structural load?

49% Answer Correctly

wind load

dead load

occupancy load

live load


Solution

Dead load is the weight of the building and materials, live load is additional weight due to occupancy or use, snow load is the weight of accumulated snow on a structure and wind load is the force of wind pressures against structure surfaces.


2

On Earth, acceleration due to gravity (g) is approximately __________. 

81% Answer Correctly

1 m/s2

1 m/s

6.67 x 10-11 m/s2

9.8 m/s2


Solution

Newton's Law of Univeral Gravitation defines the general formula for the attraction of gravity between two objects:  \(\vec{F_{g}} = { Gm_{1}m_{2} \over r^2}\) . In the specific case of an object falling toward Earth, the acceleration due to gravity (g) is approximately 9.8 m/s2


3

Which of the following represents how much two materials resist sliding across each other?

54% Answer Correctly

normal friction

kinetic friction

static friction

coefficient of friction


Solution

Coefficient of friction (μ) represents how much two materials resist sliding across each other.  Smooth surfaces like ice have low coefficients of friction while rough surfaces like concrete have high μ.


4

Power is the rate at which:

62% Answer Correctly

potential energy is converted into kinetic energy

work is done

input force is transferred to output force

friction is overcome


Solution

Power is the rate at which work is done, P = w/t, or work per unit time. The watt (W) is the unit for power and is equal to 1 joule (or newton-meter) per second. Horsepower (hp) is another familiar unit of power used primarily for rating internal combustion engines. 1 hp equals 746 watts.


5

Coplanar forces:

62% Answer Correctly

act along the same line of action

have opposite dimensions

act in a common plane

pass through a common point


Solution

Collinear forces act along the same line of action, concurrent forces pass through a common point and coplanar forces act in a common plane.