ASVAB Shop Information Practice Test 260052 Results

Your Results Global Average
Questions 5 5
Correct 0 3.32
Score 0% 66%

Review

1

This tool is a(n) __________.

67% Answer Correctly

screwdriver

chisel

awl

punch


Solution

A punch is narrow and is used to drive objects like nails (pin punch) or for making guide marks for drilling (center punch) or patterns in wood or metal.


2

These tools are called:

90% Answer Correctly

rasps

chisels

planes

files


Solution

Wood chisels are used to shape or smooth wood surfaces. They come in a variety of widths and can be used with hand power or tapped with a mallet when deeper cuts need to be made.


3

Which of the following is not a common pliers configuration?

64% Answer Correctly

needle nose

adjustable joint

wire

locking


Solution

Pliers are designed to provide a mechanical advantage, allowing the force of the hand's grip to be amplified and focused with precision. Pliers also allow finer control over objects that are too small to be manipulated by the fingers alone. The standard configuration is combination pliers which provide a fixed maximum jaw width. Other styles include adjustable joint pliers that allow selecting jaw width, needle nose pliers for holding small objects in tight spaces and locking pliers that will lock in place to hold or clamp objects together.


4

When compared to drilling, boring makes __________ holes.

73% Answer Correctly

smaller

rougher

smoother

larger


Solution

Drilling is the process of making small holes in wood or metal while boring is the process of making larger holes.


5

Which of the following is not an advantage of using a ratchet with a larger point-sized socket?

35% Answer Correctly

larger point sizes allow greater toque to be applied

larger point sizes are stronger

all of these are advantages of larger point sizes

larger point sizes allow easier alignment


Solution

A ratchet (or socket wrench) is a wrench that applies torque in only one direction with a handle that can be moved back and forth without losing contact with the fastener. A ratchet uses variable attachments called sockets which come in a variety of drive sizes based on the size of the opening that attaches to the ratchet. Sockets with the same drive size will vary in the shape (six-point, twelve-point) and size of the nut opening that attaches to the fastener being tightened or loosened. Smaller point sized sockets are stronger and can apply greater torque while larger point sizes allow easier alignment.