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When performing a pre-trip inspection, why is it important to check the engine oil level before starting the engine?
- Because oil readings are inaccurate when the engine is warm
- Because starting an engine with low oil can cause serious internal damage ✓
- Because federal law requires it to be done cold
- Because the oil will leak out when the engine is running
The most critical reason for checking oil before starting the engine is mechanical protection. Engine oil lubricates moving parts including bearings, pistons, and the crankshaft. If oil is dangerously low, starting the engine can cause metal-on-metal contact within seconds, scoring bearings and pote…
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Which of the following is a sign that a tire is unsafe for highway use?
- Tread depth of 4/32 inch on a front tire
- Tread depth of 2/32 inch on a steering axle tire ✓
- A regroovable tire on a non-steering axle
- A radial tire mixed with another radial tire
Federal regulations require steering axle tires to have a minimum tread depth of 4/32 of an inch. Other tires must have at least 2/32 inch. A steering tire with only 2/32 inch tread is well below the legal minimum and is unsafe. Steering tires receive more wear and bear critical responsibility for v…
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During the seven-step pre-trip inspection, which step typically comes first?
- Engine compartment checks
- Vehicle overview ✓
- Start engine and inspect inside the cab
- Check the lights
The FMCSA CDL Manual outlines a seven-step pre-trip inspection. Step one is the vehicle overview: a walk-around approach where you check for damage, leaks under the vehicle, the general condition of the truck, and any obvious problems. This gives you context before you dig into details. Step two is …
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What is the maximum allowable play in a manual steering wheel before it must be repaired?
- More than 5 degrees of play
- More than 10 degrees of play (about 2 inches of movement on a 20-inch wheel) ✓
- Any noticeable play
- More than 30 degrees of play
Steering wheel free play of more than 10 degrees, which equates to approximately 2 inches of movement on a 20-inch diameter steering wheel, makes a vehicle difficult to steer accurately and is considered a defect that must be corrected before operation. Excessive play means the driver's input does n…
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When backing a commercial vehicle, what is the safest method?
- Back quickly to minimize the time spent in reverse
- Use a helper when possible and back slowly ✓
- Rely on your mirrors only and never use a helper
- Always back in a straight line regardless of where you need to go
Backing a commercial vehicle is dangerous because you cannot see everything behind the trailer. The safest approach is to use a helper whenever possible and to back slowly. A helper should stand near the back of the vehicle in a position where the driver can see them in the side mirror, and driver a…
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When using a non-synchronized manual transmission, what is the proper method to upshift?
- Single-clutch with the engine at high RPM
- Double-clutch: release accelerator, depress clutch and shift to neutral, release clutch, depress clutch again and shift to next gear, release clutch and accelerate ✓
- Skip-shift two gears at a time to save fuel
- Use the clutch only when starting from a stop
Most heavy commercial vehicles use non-synchronized manual transmissions, which require the double-clutch technique to shift cleanly without grinding gears. To upshift: release the accelerator, push in the clutch and shift to neutral at the same time, release the clutch, let the engine and gears slo…
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When should you downshift a commercial vehicle?
- Only when coming to a complete stop
- Before entering a curve or starting down a hill ✓
- After the vehicle has slowed below the gear's normal operating range
- Whenever the engine RPM is in the middle of its operating range
Downshifting should happen before entering a curve or starting down a long hill, not during or after. Downshifting before a curve allows the driver to use engine power to maintain speed through the curve and accelerate smoothly out of it. Downshifting before a hill gives the engine compression braki…
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How far ahead should a commercial driver look when driving at highway speeds?
- About 100 feet, or one-quarter of a city block
- About a quarter of a mile, or 12 to 15 seconds of travel time ✓
- Only as far as the headlights illuminate
- Approximately one mile
At highway speed, look 12 to 15 seconds ahead, which is roughly a quarter mile, or about one-quarter mile in good visibility. In city driving, 12 to 15 seconds is closer to one and a half blocks. The reason is reaction time: scanning far ahead lets you identify problems early enough to slow, change …
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When should you use your turn signals on a commercial vehicle?
- Only when changing lanes on a highway
- When changing direction, signaling well before the turn and canceling it after ✓
- Only when other vehicles are visible behind you
- Briefly tap them just before turning so other drivers don't get confused
Signal any time you change direction: turning, changing lanes, pulling away from the curb, or pulling onto a highway from the shoulder. Signal well before the turn so other drivers have time to react — at highway speed this means at least three to five seconds before you begin the maneuver. Cancel t…
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What is the minimum following distance for a commercial vehicle traveling at 40 mph in good conditions?
- 1 second of following distance
- 4 seconds of following distance ✓
- 8 seconds of following distance
- 12 seconds of following distance
The FMCSA rule of thumb is one second of following distance for every 10 feet of vehicle length at speeds up to 40 mph. A typical tractor-trailer is around 40 to 50 feet long, requiring four to five seconds of following distance. Above 40 mph, add one additional second. The 'one second per 10 feet' …
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How long does a tractor-trailer typically need to clear an intersection from a complete stop?
- About 3 seconds
- About 14 seconds for a 53-foot trailer ✓
- Less than 5 seconds in any case
- It varies but is roughly the same as a passenger car
A loaded 53-foot tractor-trailer accelerating from a standstill needs roughly 14 seconds to fully clear a standard intersection. This is far longer than the time a passenger car needs and matters enormously when judging gaps in cross traffic. A driver pulling onto a road without enough gap can leave…
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On a wet road, how should you adjust your speed compared to dry conditions?
- Maintain the same speed; modern tires handle wet roads well
- Reduce speed by about one-third ✓
- Reduce speed by about two-thirds
- Drive at half of the posted speed limit regardless of conditions
On a wet road, you should reduce your speed by about one-third compared to dry conditions. So if traffic and conditions on a dry road would have you at 55 mph, on wet pavement you would be down around 35 mph. On packed snow, reduce by one-half. On ice, reduce by two-thirds. The reasons are stopping …
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When meeting an oncoming vehicle at night with bright headlights, what should you do?
- Stare at the oncoming headlights to gauge distance
- Look slightly to the right toward the edge of your lane ✓
- Flash your high beams to retaliate
- Close one eye until the vehicle passes
When meeting an oncoming vehicle at night with headlights that are blinding you, look slightly down and to the right, toward the right edge of the road or the right shoulder line. This protects your night vision from the direct glare and lets you use the road edge as your steering reference until th…
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Which of the following is most likely to be slippery when wet?
- Asphalt that has just begun to get wet after a long dry spell ✓
- Concrete that has been wet for an hour
- A road in steady rain after 45 minutes
- A road that has been thoroughly soaked in heavy rain for several hours
A road is most slippery during the first few minutes of rain after a long dry spell. Oil, rubber, and other contaminants build up on the road surface during dry weather. When water first hits, it mixes with these substances to form a slick, almost greasy film. Once the road has been thoroughly washe…
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What does a 'shiny' patch of road in winter typically indicate?
- Fresh, well-maintained pavement
- Possible black ice ✓
- Recently applied de-icing salt that is safe to drive on
- Dry pavement reflecting sunlight
A 'shiny' or 'wet-looking' patch of road in freezing conditions is one of the strongest visual indicators of black ice. Black ice is a thin, transparent layer of ice that takes the color of the pavement beneath it, making it appear to be wet road. It forms most easily on bridges, overpasses, and sha…
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What is the most important rule for descending a long, steep grade in a commercial vehicle?
- Use only the service brakes to control speed
- Select a safe descent speed and use a low enough gear that engine braking does most of the work ✓
- Coast in neutral to save fuel
- Use the parking brake as a backup speed control
On a long steep descent, choose a safe target speed and a low enough gear that the engine and any auxiliary brake (Jake brake, retarder) do most of the work holding speed. Service brakes alone overheat on long grades, leading to brake fade where the brakes become progressively less effective and can…
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If your vehicle leaves the pavement and drops two wheels onto a soft shoulder at highway speed, what should you do?
- Steer back onto the pavement immediately
- Hold the wheel firmly, stay off the brake, and ease back onto the pavement at a sharp angle
- Hold the wheel firmly, stay off the brake, slow to about 20 mph, then ease back onto the pavement at a gentle angle ✓
- Slam the brakes to slow down before steering back
If you drift onto the shoulder, do not panic-steer back. Hold the steering wheel firmly to maintain control, ease off the accelerator, stay off the brake unless you absolutely must use it, and let the vehicle slow naturally to roughly 20 mph. When ready, check your mirrors and steer back onto the pa…
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What is the proper response if your brakes fail on a downgrade?
- Pump the brakes vigorously until pressure returns
- Immediately steer toward the median
- Downshift if possible, then use an escape ramp if available ✓
- Set the parking brake while moving at full speed
If your service brakes fail on a downgrade, the priority is to bring the vehicle to a controlled stop using whatever resources remain. First, downshift to use engine braking. If your route has a runaway truck escape ramp, use it without hesitation — these are loose gravel or sand ramps engineered sp…
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Which type of fire should never be fought with water?
- A fire involving wood pallets
- A fire involving paper trash
- A fire involving fuel, oil, or electrical equipment ✓
- A fire in a tire's exposed rubber
Water should not be used on fuel, oil, grease, or electrical fires. Water on burning fuel or oil floats the burning liquid across a wider area and can splash flaming material onto the firefighter. Water on an energized electrical fire conducts current and creates a serious shock hazard. Class B fire…
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After stopping at the scene of an accident, what should the driver do first?
- Move all involved vehicles to the shoulder immediately
- Protect the area by setting out warning devices and preventing further collisions ✓
- Take photos of the damage for the insurance claim
- Leave the scene to call 911 from a safe distance
The first priority at an accident scene is to prevent another collision. Stop your vehicle in a safe location, activate your four-way flashers, and set out the required warning devices: three reflective triangles or three flares for the standard daytime configuration. Triangles go on the traffic sid…
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What is the legal blood alcohol concentration limit for operating a commercial vehicle under federal regulations?
- 0.08%
- 0.04% ✓
- 0.02%
- Zero tolerance — any detectable alcohol
Federal regulations set the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) limit for commercial drivers at 0.04 percent, half of the 0.08 percent limit that applies to non-commercial drivers in most states. A BAC of 0.04 or higher in a commercial vehicle is a per se violation, meaning the BAC alone proves impair…
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How long does it take for the body to eliminate the alcohol from one standard drink?
- About 15 minutes
- About 1 hour ✓
- About 4 hours
- About 12 hours
The average adult body metabolizes alcohol at roughly one standard drink per hour. A standard drink is 12 ounces of beer at 5 percent ABV, 5 ounces of wine at 12 percent ABV, or 1.5 ounces of distilled spirits at 40 percent ABV. There is no way to speed this up: coffee, cold showers, exercise, food,…
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What is the most effective remedy for driver fatigue?
- Strong coffee and energy drinks
- Loud music and an open window
- A short nap of 10 to 45 minutes ✓
- Talking to another driver on the CB radio
The only effective remedy for sleepiness is sleep. A short nap of 10 to 45 minutes restores alertness far more reliably than caffeine, fresh air, music, or conversation. Caffeine helps mild fatigue but cannot overcome real sleep debt, and the crash after caffeine often makes things worse. Cold air a…
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How much of the vehicle's gross weight must be carried by the steering axle for normal handling?
- At least 5% of the gross weight
- At least 20% of the gross weight ✓
- Exactly 50% of the gross weight
- It does not matter as long as no axle is overloaded
At least 20 percent of the gross combined weight of the vehicle and load should be carried by the steering axle for the driver to maintain proper steering control. If too little weight rests on the front axle, the tractor's front tires lose traction and the truck becomes hard to steer, especially in…
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How often must cargo securement be inspected during a trip?
- Only at the start and end of the trip
- Within the first 50 miles, and then every 150 miles or 3 hours, whichever comes first ✓
- Every 500 miles
- Only when stopping for fuel
Federal regulations require that cargo securement be inspected within the first 50 miles of the trip, then again every 150 miles or every 3 hours, whichever comes first. Securement must also be re-inspected any time the driver changes duty status, takes a break, or before starting after a rest. The …
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Which of the following is the correct procedure for testing the parking brake before driving?
- With the engine off, set the parking brake and try to start the engine in gear
- With the parking brake set, place the vehicle in a low gear and gently release the clutch — the vehicle should not move ✓
- Push hard on the brake pedal three times to test air pressure
- Allow the vehicle to roll on a flat surface to confirm the brake holds
Test the parking brake by setting it, placing the vehicle in a low gear, releasing the clutch slowly with the engine running, and gently increasing power. The parking brake should hold the vehicle in place; if the truck rolls or creeps, the parking brake is defective and the vehicle must not be driv…
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What is meant by the term 'off-tracking' in a commercial vehicle?
- The vehicle drifting off the road shoulder
- The rear wheels of a tractor-trailer following a tighter path than the front wheels during a turn ✓
- An older brake design that no longer meets federal standards
- The trailer skidding sideways during emergency braking
Off-tracking is the natural geometric tendency of the rear wheels of a tractor-trailer to follow a tighter path through a turn than the front wheels. The longer the wheelbase, the more pronounced the off-track. This is why a tractor-trailer making a right turn must swing wide to the left before turn…
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What does 'lugging' an engine mean and why is it harmful?
- Running the engine at too high an RPM, which causes overheating
- Operating the engine at too low an RPM under load, which damages the engine ✓
- Failing to use the clutch when shifting gears
- Carrying a load above the rated capacity of the truck
Lugging is operating the engine at too low an RPM for the load being carried, typically because the driver is in too high a gear. Symptoms include the engine straining, the truck slowing, and visible black smoke. Lugging damages the engine over time through excessive heat and stress on the rods, bea…
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What is the most effective way to use mirrors when driving a commercial vehicle?
- Glance at them only when changing lanes
- Stare into them constantly to monitor traffic behind
- Scan them regularly every 5 to 8 seconds with quick glances ✓
- Use only the convex mirror because it shows the most
Effective mirror use means scanning regularly with brief glances, every 5 to 8 seconds while driving normally, and more often before any lane change or turn. Each scan should be a quick check, not a long stare, because your eyes need to return to the road ahead. Use both the flat (West Coast) mirror…
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When should you flash your brake lights to warn drivers behind you?
- Never; brake lights should come on only when slowing
- Tap the brake pedal lightly to flash the lights when you are about to slow suddenly or when stopped traffic is ahead ✓
- Only when the vehicle behind is tailgating
- Continuously while traveling under the speed limit
Tapping the brake pedal lightly to flash the brake lights is a deliberate warning to following drivers when you are about to slow significantly, when there is a traffic jam ahead they may not see, or when an obstacle requires you to brake harder than usual. The early warning gives the driver behind …
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What is a 'No-Zone' around a tractor-trailer?
- A zone where the trailer cannot turn
- An area of large blind spots where other vehicles disappear from the driver's view ✓
- A federally designated no-parking zone
- An area where the truck is prohibited from changing lanes
The 'No-Zones' are the large blind spots around a tractor-trailer where smaller vehicles disappear from the driver's view. They are located: directly in front of the tractor (about 20 feet), directly behind the trailer (about 200 feet), along the entire right side of the trailer (the biggest blind s…
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How does stopping distance change when speed doubles?
- Stopping distance doubles
- Stopping distance increases by about 50%
- Stopping distance roughly quadruples ✓
- Stopping distance stays the same on dry pavement
Stopping distance increases with the square of speed, not linearly. Doubling speed roughly quadruples the distance needed to stop. This is because braking energy is proportional to the square of speed, so twice as fast means four times as much kinetic energy that the brakes must dissipate. Total sto…
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When driving in fog, which of the following should you do?
- Use high beam headlights for maximum visibility
- Use low beams and slow down, with fog lights on if equipped ✓
- Drive with hazard flashers on at all times
- Follow closer to the vehicle ahead to keep them in sight
In fog, use low beam headlights and slow down. High beams reflect off the water droplets in fog and create a wall of glare that actually reduces your forward visibility. Low beams aim downward and cut under some of the reflection. If your truck is equipped with fog lights, use them — they are design…
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If a front tire blows out at highway speed, what should you do first?
- Brake firmly and steer to the shoulder
- Hold the steering wheel firmly, stay off the brake, and let the vehicle slow naturally ✓
- Steer sharply onto the shoulder to clear traffic
- Pump the brake pedal to recover air pressure
A front tire blowout at speed causes a sudden, strong pull toward the side of the failed tire. The correct response is to grip the steering wheel firmly with both hands and counter-steer just enough to maintain your lane. Stay off the brake until the vehicle has slowed considerably; braking with a f…
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Where should the second warning triangle be placed when stopped on a two-lane road in daylight?
- 10 feet behind the vehicle
- About 100 feet behind the vehicle
- About 100 feet ahead of the vehicle ✓
- 200 feet behind the vehicle
On a two-way or undivided road, the three warning triangles are placed as follows: one within 10 feet of the rear corner of the vehicle on the traffic side, one about 100 feet behind the vehicle on the shoulder or in the lane traffic uses to approach, and one about 100 feet in front of the vehicle i…
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Under FMCSA regulations, what is the consequence of refusing to take a required drug or alcohol test?
- A 30-day suspension from driving
- A written warning for the first offense only
- The refusal is treated the same as a positive test result ✓
- No penalty if the driver later passes a private test
Federal regulations treat refusal of a required drug or alcohol test the same as a positive test. A driver who refuses is placed in 'prohibited' status in the FMCSA Clearinghouse and cannot perform safety-sensitive functions until they complete the return-to-duty process: evaluation by a Substance A…
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Federal Hours of Service rules for property-carrying commercial drivers limit driving time after how many consecutive hours off duty?
- 8 consecutive hours
- 10 consecutive hours ✓
- 12 consecutive hours
- 24 consecutive hours
Under federal Hours of Service rules for property-carrying commercial drivers, a driver may not drive after 10 consecutive hours off duty without a fresh start. The full set of property-carrier limits includes: maximum 11 hours of driving following 10 consecutive hours off duty; cannot drive beyond …
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What is the minimum number of tiedowns required for a piece of cargo 6 feet long and weighing less than 1,100 pounds?
- One tiedown ✓
- Two tiedowns
- Four tiedowns
- No tiedowns are required for loads under 1,100 pounds
Federal cargo securement standards specify a minimum number of tiedowns based on cargo length and weight. For an item 5 feet long or less and weighing 1,100 pounds or less, one tiedown is the minimum. For items longer than 5 feet, or weighing more than 1,100 pounds, at least two tiedowns are require…
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When making a right turn at an intersection in a tractor-trailer, you should:
- Swing wide to the left before starting the turn
- Turn from the curb lane as tightly as possible
- Drive the tractor into the lane to the left of the turn lane, then turn
- Begin the turn slightly later than a car would ✓
When making a right turn in a tractor-trailer, position yourself in the rightmost lane, begin the turn slightly later (further into the intersection) than a car would, and keep the rear of the trailer close to the curb to prevent vehicles from squeezing into the gap on your right. Swinging wide to t…
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On a long straight road, where should your eyes spend most of their time?
- On the vehicle directly ahead
- Sweeping the scene 12 to 15 seconds ahead and scanning mirrors regularly ✓
- Locked on the road just in front of your hood
- On the speedometer to maintain a constant speed
Effective scanning on a long, straight road means keeping your gaze 12 to 15 seconds ahead — about a quarter mile at highway speed — while sweeping side to side and checking mirrors every 5 to 8 seconds. This gives you time to identify problems while they are still distant and to take smooth, planne…
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How much space should you maintain between you and the curb when stopped at an intersection on a city street?
- As close to the curb as possible to avoid blocking traffic
- Enough space to allow a sharp right turn without climbing the curb ✓
- A vehicle's width to allow other vehicles to squeeze past on the right
- Eight to ten feet to maximize visibility
When stopped at an intersection where you plan to turn right, leave just enough space at the right edge to make the turn smoothly without the trailer climbing the curb. Do not leave a vehicle's width of space because that invites passenger cars and bicycles to squeeze into the gap, where they cannot…
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What does it mean if your wheels start to skid during braking?
- The brakes are working as designed
- You have lost traction and steering control ✓
- The vehicle is decelerating at maximum effectiveness
- Anti-lock brakes are working properly
When wheels lock up and skid during braking, the vehicle loses both braking effectiveness and steering control. A skidding tire produces less stopping force than a tire that is rolling at the threshold of grip, and a skidding front tire cannot steer at all because the tire is sliding rather than rol…
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An escape ramp is intended to be used:
- Only as a last resort after multiple failed alternatives
- Whenever a driver loses control of speed on a downgrade ✓
- Only when traffic is light enough to safely reach it
- For routine speed reduction on steep grades
Escape ramps are designed and built for one purpose: to stop a runaway commercial vehicle safely when the driver has lost control of speed on a downgrade. If you find yourself accelerating uncontrollably on a downhill and brakes are not holding, take the escape ramp immediately — do not wait to see …
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What does the term 'jackknife' refer to?
- The trailer swinging out of line with the tractor, forming an L or V shape ✓
- A sudden loss of air pressure in the trailer brakes
- An emergency disconnect of the trailer from the tractor
- A type of cargo tiedown used for vehicles
A jackknife occurs when the trailer swings out of alignment with the tractor, folding to one side like a folding knife (hence the name). It typically happens when the trailer's wheels lose traction during hard braking or when descending a slick grade; the trailer continues forward by momentum while …
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Which of the following increases the risk of a vehicle fire?
- Tires inflated to the proper pressure
- Fully charged batteries with clean terminals
- Under-inflated tires and loose fuel connections ✓
- Properly maintained electrical wiring
Under-inflated tires and loose fuel system connections are among the most common preventable causes of commercial vehicle fires. Under-inflated tires generate excess heat from flexing as they roll, and the heat can ignite the tire's rubber or nearby flammable surfaces. Loose fuel connections leak di…
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Which of the following statements about over-the-counter and prescription medications is correct?
- Only illegal drugs can affect a driver's ability to operate safely
- Over-the-counter medications cannot affect driving
- Some legal medications can impair driving and must be evaluated before driving a commercial vehicle ✓
- Prescription medications are always safe if prescribed by a doctor
Many legal medications, including common over-the-counter products, can impair driving. Examples include antihistamines that cause drowsiness, sleep aids, some pain medications, anti-anxiety drugs, certain blood pressure medications, and many cold and allergy preparations. Federal regulations requir…
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When is a driver most likely to fall asleep at the wheel?
- Mid-morning between 9 AM and noon
- Between midnight and 6 AM, and to a lesser extent in mid-afternoon ✓
- Immediately after a meal regardless of the time
- Only after more than 16 hours of continuous driving
Drowsy driving crashes peak between midnight and 6 AM, when the body's circadian rhythm pushes hardest toward sleep, with a secondary peak in the mid-afternoon (roughly 1 to 4 PM). The body is biologically programmed to sleep at night and slow down in mid-afternoon, and this drive does not disappear…
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What is the working load limit (WLL) of a tiedown?
- The breaking strength of the tiedown
- The maximum load the tiedown is designed to handle in normal service, typically one-third of breaking strength ✓
- The legal load limit set by FMCSA for any tiedown
- The total weight of cargo the truck can carry
Working Load Limit (WLL) is the maximum load a tiedown is designed to handle during normal use. It is typically one-third of the tiedown's breaking strength, providing a safety margin for shock loads, wear, and degradation. Federal regulations require the aggregate WLL of all tiedowns on a piece of …
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Why is it important to check the suspension during a pre-trip inspection?
- Suspension components are checked annually so daily inspection is unnecessary
- Suspension defects can cause loss of vehicle control and dangerous load shifts ✓
- Suspension only affects ride comfort, not safety
- Suspension inspection is only required for vehicles over 80,000 pounds
Suspension components hold the axles in place and keep the cargo from shifting. A broken spring leaf, missing U-bolt, leaking air bag, or worn shock absorber can let an axle move out of position, cause the vehicle to lean, or allow excessive bouncing that disturbs cargo securement. In extreme cases,…
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What is the recommended technique when you must back up a tractor-trailer in a straight line?
- Steer in the direction you want the rear of the trailer to go ✓
- Steer in the opposite direction of where you want the rear of the trailer to go
- Use only mirrors and steer aggressively to correct drift
- Steer aggressively, with quick, large corrections
When backing a tractor-trailer in a straight line, steer in the direction you want the rear of the trailer to go — a counterintuitive technique for drivers used to backing cars. As the trailer begins to drift to one side, gently turn the steering wheel in the direction of the drift to bring the trai…
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During the pre-trip walk-around inspection, what should you check on all tires?
- Color only
- Tread depth, inflation, valve stems, sidewall condition, and that no dual tires are touching or have objects lodged between them ✓
- Brand name
- Manufacturing date only
A proper tire inspection covers multiple components: TREAD DEPTH — minimum 4/32 inch on steering axle tires, 2/32 inch on other axles; use a tread depth gauge or penny test; INFLATION — tires should be properly inflated per manufacturer specs; underinflation causes heat buildup and blowouts; overinf…
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What does it mean when the low air pressure warning device activates while driving?
- The AC system needs charging
- Air pressure has dropped to 60 psi or below — stop safely as soon as possible because brake failure is imminent ✓
- The horn needs repair
- Oil pressure is low
The low air pressure warning device — typically a buzzer/light combination — activates when system pressure drops to 60 psi or below. This is a critical safety emergency requiring IMMEDIATE action. WHY 60 PSI IS CRITICAL: the spring brakes (parking/emergency brakes) are held released by air pressure…
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What is the proper technique for upshifting in a non-synchronized transmission?
- Press clutch, shift directly, release clutch
- Double-clutch: press clutch, move to neutral, release clutch, rev match, press clutch again, engage next gear, release clutch smoothly ✓
- Shift without using the clutch at all
- Floor the accelerator before shifting
DOUBLE-CLUTCHING is required for non-synchronized transmissions used in most heavy commercial vehicles. Unlike car transmissions (synchronized), truck transmissions require the driver to match the rotational speed of the transmission input shaft to the gear being selected — otherwise gears grind. TH…
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What does the 'eye lead time' concept refer to in commercial vehicle driving?
- How quickly your eyes adjust to darkness
- Looking 12 to 15 seconds ahead of your vehicle — where you'll be in 12-15 seconds — to identify hazards with enough time to respond ✓
- The reaction time between seeing a hazard and pressing the brake
- How far headlights illuminate the road
EYE LEAD TIME is the practice of continuously scanning the road 12-15 seconds ahead of your vehicle. This is approximately one block in city driving and a quarter mile at highway speeds. WHY 12-15 SECONDS: At 55 mph, a vehicle travels about 80 feet per second. Perception-reaction time (seeing the ha…
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When following another vehicle on a highway at 60 mph, what is the minimum following distance recommended for a CMV driver?
- 1 second
- At least 1 second for every 10 feet of vehicle length, plus 1 additional second if over 40 mph — approximately 7-8 seconds for a 60-foot truck at 60 mph ✓
- 2 car lengths
- 10 feet
The FMCSA CDL Manual recommends a following distance of at LEAST ONE SECOND FOR EVERY 10 FEET OF VEHICLE LENGTH at speeds up to 40 mph, PLUS ONE ADDITIONAL SECOND for speeds above 40 mph. EXAMPLE CALCULATION for a 60-foot truck at 60 mph: 6 seconds (60 feet ÷ 10) + 1 additional second (over 40 mph) …
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What is 'brake fade' and how is it caused?
- Brakes wearing out from normal use over thousands of miles
- A temporary reduction in braking force caused by overheating brake drums or discs, typically from riding the brakes on long descents ✓
- Brakes that don't make contact with the drum
- Air leaking from the brake chambers
BRAKE FADE is the reduction in braking effectiveness caused by overheating brake components. HOW IT HAPPENS: When a brake pad or shoe presses against a drum or rotor, friction converts kinetic energy to heat. If brakes are applied continuously for too long (as on a long mountain descent), the drum/r…
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Before starting down a steep grade, what should a CMV driver do?
- Shift to the highest gear to maximize speed control
- Select a low gear (lower than needed on flat road) BEFORE starting down — you cannot safely downshift while already on a steep grade with loaded brakes ✓
- Apply trailer brakes only
- Coast in neutral to save fuel
Selecting a LOWER GEAR BEFORE the descent is one of the most critical mountain driving safety rules. WHY BEFORE, NOT DURING: Once a heavy vehicle begins descending a grade at speed, the kinetic energy is enormous — the engine compression braking effect is minimal unless the drivetrain is in a low en…
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If a front tire blows out while driving at highway speed, what is the correct response?
- Immediately brake as hard as possible
- Grip the steering wheel firmly, ease off the accelerator gradually, hold your course, and steer to the shoulder — do NOT brake sharply until you have control and speed reduced ✓
- Steer sharply to the right
- Accelerate out of it
A FRONT TIRE BLOWOUT at highway speed is one of the most dangerous single-tire events a driver can experience. The front axle provides steering — a blowout here causes violent pulling toward the blown tire side and significant instability. CORRECT RESPONSE: (1) GRIP FIRMLY — the steering wheel will …
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When roads become wet after a long dry spell, why are they particularly slippery?
- Water is always more slippery than dry roads
- The first rain mixes with accumulated oil, rubber, and grime on the road surface, creating a slicker mixture than plain water — the first 15-30 minutes of rain on dry roads are often the most dangerous ✓
- Road surfaces expand when wet
- Tires lose air pressure in rain
OIL AND RAIN MIXING is a phenomenon well known to experienced drivers but often overlooked by novices. During dry periods, vehicles drip motor oil, automatic transmission fluid, grease, and other petroleum products onto the road surface. Rubber abraded from tires also coats the pavement. These mater…
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What is the maximum legal weight for a combination vehicle (tractor-trailer) on Interstate highways under federal regulations?
- 60,000 lbs
- 80,000 lbs gross vehicle weight, with specific axle weight limits (20,000 lbs single axle, 34,000 lbs tandem axle) under federal law; some states permit higher weights on non-Interstate routes with permits ✓
- 100,000 lbs
- No federal maximum exists
FEDERAL WEIGHT LIMITS (23 USC 127 and 49 CFR 658): GROSS VEHICLE WEIGHT (GVW): 80,000 lbs maximum on Interstate highways. SINGLE AXLE: 20,000 lbs maximum. TANDEM AXLE (two axles within 40 inches of each other): 34,000 lbs maximum. BRIDGE FORMULA (Federal Bridge Gross Weight Formula): The weight any …
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How must cargo be secured to prevent it from shifting during transport?
- Just stack it carefully — gravity handles the rest
- Cargo must be firmly immobilized using tie-downs, blocking, bracing, or friction to prevent shifting, falling, or leaking; total tie-down force must equal at least half the weight of the cargo ✓
- Cover it with a tarp only
- Cargo in enclosed trailers doesn't need to be secured
FEDERAL CARGO SECUREMENT RULES (49 CFR Part 393.100-136) establish minimum requirements for securing cargo to prevent shifting, falling, or leaking during transport. GENERAL RULE: Cargo must be secured well enough that it can't shift or fall during normal braking, acceleration, and cornering, AND du…
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Under FMCSA regulations, what is the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) limit for CDL drivers operating a commercial vehicle?
- 0.08% (same as non-commercial)
- 0.04% — half the limit for non-commercial drivers; a CDL driver can be cited for driving under the influence at 0.04% BAC while operating a CMV ✓
- 0.10%
- Any detectable alcohol is permitted during off-duty hours
FMCSA ALCOHOL REGULATIONS (49 CFR 382): CDL drivers operating a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) are subject to a BAC limit of 0.04% — exactly half the 0.08% limit for non-commercial drivers. This reflects the increased danger posed by impaired operation of a multi-ton vehicle. ADDITIONAL ALCOHOL RULE…
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Which of the following is a warning sign that a driver may be experiencing fatigue?
- Feeling alert and focused
- Head nodding, hitting rumble strips, missing road signs you just passed, drifting between lanes, or having trouble keeping eyes open — these are indications of dangerous fatigue requiring immediate rest ✓
- Eating while driving
- Checking mirrors frequently
FATIGUE is one of the most serious safety threats in commercial trucking. The FMCSA estimates that fatigue contributes to 13% of large-truck crashes. DANGER: unlike impairment from alcohol (which a driver often feels and may attempt to compensate for), severe fatigue can cause 'microsleeps' of 4-30 …
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When is it appropriate to sound the horn while driving a CMV?
- Never — horns are not required on CMVs
- To alert other drivers or pedestrians to your presence when they may not be aware of you — approaching intersections with limited visibility, passing cyclists, or when another driver is about to merge into your lane ✓
- Only when you are angry at other drivers
- Only in emergencies where braking won't work
The HORN is a critical communication tool for CMV drivers and should be used proactively, not reactively. Commercial vehicles have significant blind spots — the right side, the immediate front, and the rear — that make it impossible for nearby road users to always see you. APPROPRIATE HORN USE: (1) …
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What is 'overdriving your headlights' and why is it dangerous?
- Using headlights during the day
- Driving at a speed where you cannot stop within the distance illuminated by your headlights — if an obstacle is at the edge of visibility, you cannot stop before hitting it ✓
- Using high beams when you should use low beams
- Having misaligned headlights
OVERDRIVING HEADLIGHTS means traveling at a speed where your stopping distance EXCEEDS your headlight sight distance — so if a hazard appears at the edge of what your headlights illuminate, you physically cannot stop before reaching it. THE MATH: Low beam headlights illuminate approximately 250 feet…
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What is off-tracking and how does it affect large vehicles making turns?
- When GPS navigation gives incorrect directions
- The rear wheels of a long vehicle follow a shorter path than the front wheels in a turn — the rear wheels cut inside the front wheels' path, requiring drivers to swing wide or risk the rear wheels hitting curbs, parked cars, or pedestrians ✓
- When wheels lose traction on wet pavement
- A trailer fishtailing on a straight road
OFF-TRACKING (also called CHEATING) is the geometric difference between the path of the front (steering) wheels and the path of the rear wheels when a vehicle makes a turn. For a standard car, off-tracking is small and mostly unnoticeable. For a 53-foot tractor-trailer, it is dramatic and dangerous.…
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If a fire breaks out in the engine compartment while driving, what should you do?
- Continue to the nearest fire station
- Pull off the road safely, cut the engine, use a fire extinguisher on the engine fire, do NOT open the hood fully (feeding oxygen accelerates the fire), and call 911 if you cannot control it ✓
- Pour water from a water bottle on the engine
- Keep driving to keep airflow through the engine
ENGINE COMPARTMENT FIRE requires immediate, controlled action. STEP-BY-STEP RESPONSE: (1) PULL OFF: Get off the road immediately — don't continue driving except to reach an immediate safe pull-off; (2) SHUT ENGINE OFF: Cut fuel supply by killing the ignition; (3) CALL 911 if the fire is beyond a sma…
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How much space should a CMV driver allow when passing a cyclist or pedestrian?
- As little as possible to save road space
- At least 3 feet clearance from cyclists per many state laws, and sufficient lateral space for pedestrians — treat these interactions with extra caution because a mirror strike or gust from the truck can knock a cyclist down ✓
- The same as passing another vehicle
- No requirement — cyclists must yield to trucks
PASSING VULNERABLE ROAD USERS (cyclists, pedestrians, motorcyclists) requires more care than passing other CMVs. CMV-SPECIFIC HAZARDS: Extended mirrors can extend 2-3 feet from the cab on a tractor — a CDL driver who is '3 feet from the curb' may still have a mirror within 1 foot of a cyclist; the v…
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What is the purpose of a 'bill of lading'?
- The driver's paycheck documentation
- A shipping document that identifies the shipper, consignee, cargo description, weight, and any special instructions — the contract between the shipper and carrier and the driver's authority to have the cargo ✓
- The weigh station receipt
- The driver's medical certificate
A BILL OF LADING (BOL) is one of the most important documents in freight transport. WHAT IT IS: A legal document serving three functions: (1) RECEIPT for cargo — confirms the carrier received the goods from the shipper; (2) CONTRACT for carriage — defines the terms under which the goods will be tran…
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What is the primary purpose of a driver's left side mirror in a tractor-trailer?
- Decoration only
- Monitoring the area to the left and rear — vehicles in the left lane adjacent to the trailer, merging traffic, vehicles entering your blind zone, and the trailer's position and any cargo issues ✓
- Seeing directly behind the trailer (it cannot do this)
- Checking the passenger side
A CMV driver relies heavily on mirrors because there is no rearward visibility through a solid-sided trailer. MIRROR SYSTEM ON A TRACTOR-TRAILER: (1) LEFT CONVEX MIRROR: Provides a wide-angle view of the area to the left and slightly behind the cab; shows left-lane traffic that may be alongside the …
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What is the correct technique for emergency braking in a straight line when a CMV does NOT have ABS?
- Press the brake pedal to the floor and hold it
- Threshold braking — apply brakes just hard enough to feel wheel lockup beginning, then ease off slightly; or stab braking — hard application then complete release, repeated — to maintain steering control while achieving maximum deceleration ✓
- Apply the trailer brake only
- Release the brakes completely and steer around the obstacle
For CMVs WITHOUT ABS (increasingly rare, as ABS is required on new vehicles, but older equipment may lack it), emergency braking is a skill requiring technique. THE PROBLEM WITH LOCKING WHEELS: When a wheel locks (skids), friction actually decreases compared to a rolling wheel, AND steering control …
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When should a CMV driver use the trailer hand valve (trolley valve)?
- For all normal stops to save wear on service brakes
- Only to test trailer brakes during the pre-trip inspection — using it while driving can cause the trailer to jackknife ✓
- Any time extra braking is needed on a hill
- Whenever the road is slippery
The TRAILER HAND VALVE (also called the TROLLEY VALVE or INDEPENDENT TRAILER BRAKE) is located on the steering column or dashboard and applies ONLY the trailer brakes when activated. CORRECT USE — PRE-TRIP INSPECTION ONLY: The hand valve is properly used to TEST trailer brakes during the pre-trip in…
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What is the '14-hour rule' in FMCSA hours of service regulations?
- Drivers may work for 14 consecutive hours then take a 14-hour break
- Once a driver begins their work day, they may not drive after the 14th hour from the start of that shift — regardless of how many actual driving hours they used and whether they took breaks during the 14 hours ✓
- Drivers may drive for 14 hours before taking a 10-hour break
- Drivers must rest 14 hours after a long-haul trip
The 14-HOUR RULE is one of the most important and most misunderstood HOS regulations. WHAT IT SAYS: Once a driver begins their duty day (when they go on duty, which may be before the first moment of driving), a 14-hour 'window' opens. The driver may NOT drive after the 14th hour of that window — eve…
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During the in-cab inspection, what should the driver check regarding gauges and controls?
- Only the speedometer
- All gauges (oil pressure, coolant temp, voltmeter/ammeter, engine warning lights), all controls (steering play, accelerator, all mirrors adjustment, windshield wipers and washers, heater/defroster), horn, and lights ✓
- Just start the engine and listen
- Only check if there is a problem
The IN-CAB INSPECTION phase of the pre-trip check verifies that all cab equipment is functional before the vehicle leaves the yard. WHAT TO CHECK: GAUGES: Oil pressure — should come up within seconds of engine start; if no oil pressure within 5-10 seconds, shut down immediately; Coolant temperature …
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When driving in heavy fog, what actions should a CMV driver take?
- Use high beams to see farther
- Slow down significantly (to a speed where you can stop within your visibility range), use low beams (high beams reflect off fog and reduce visibility further), use fog lights if equipped, activate hazard lights if very slow, and if visibility is dangerously low, pull completely off the road ✓
- Maintain normal speed with hazard lights
- Drive in the center of the road to be visible
DRIVING IN HEAVY FOG requires multiple simultaneous adjustments: REDUCE SPEED: This is the most important action. Your stopping distance must be within your sight distance — in fog, that may be 200 feet or less. Even at 25 mph, stopping a loaded truck takes 100+ feet. In severe fog, stop completely.…