Study tips ASVAB Auto & Shop Information
ASVAB · Auto & Shop Information

ASVAB Auto & Shop Information Practice Questions: 6 Problems with Answers

Auto & Shop Information rewards hands-on familiarity - knowing what a part does and which tool fits the job - far more than calculation. The section leans on a handful of recurring ideas: how an engine runs, how the cooling and brake systems work, and how everyday shop tools and fasteners behave. Here are six problems in the real test's style, each built around one of those ideas and explained in full.

The trap in Auto & Shop is a small vocabulary gap - one word like thermostat, feeler gauge or crosscut deciding the whole question. Work the six problems below; each targets a different corner of the section. Pick an answer first, then open the solution.

Q1The four-stroke engine cycle

In a standard four-stroke gasoline engine, which sequence lists the four strokes in the correct order?
  • A. Intake, compression, power, exhaust
  • B. Compression, intake, power, exhaust
  • C. Intake, power, compression, exhaust
  • D. Power, intake, compression, exhaust
Show the solution

The cycle is intake (the piston draws in fuel and air), compression (the piston squeezes that mixture), power (the spark plug fires and the burning mixture drives the piston down), then exhaust (the burnt gases are pushed out). A common memory hook is "suck, squeeze, bang, blow."

Answer: A. Intake, compression, power, exhaust

The power stroke has to come after compression - you cannot get useful power out of a mixture you have not squeezed yet. Any option that fires before compressing is reversing cause and effect.

Q2The cooling system

A car's thermostat is stuck in the closed position. What is the most likely result?
  • A. The engine never reaches operating temperature
  • B. The engine overheats
  • C. The battery slowly drains
  • D. The brakes lose pressure
Show the solution

The thermostat is a temperature-controlled valve between the engine and the radiator. Stuck closed, it blocks coolant from flowing to the radiator, so the heat the engine makes has nowhere to go and temperature climbs - the engine overheats.

Answer: B. The engine overheats

Option A is the trap: a thermostat stuck open does the opposite - coolant races through constantly and the engine struggles to warm up. The single word "closed" versus "open" flips the entire answer, so read it carefully.

Q3How hydraulic brakes work

Pressing the brake pedal moves fluid that pushes the pistons at each wheel. Hydraulic brakes work because:
  • A. Brake fluid can be compressed to store energy
  • B. A confined liquid transmits pressure equally in all directions
  • C. Brake fluid expands sharply when it is heated
  • D. The fluid turns to gas the moment you press the pedal
Show the solution

A liquid sealed in a line barely compresses, so pressure applied at the pedal is passed along undiminished to every wheel cylinder at once. That is what lets one foot stop four wheels evenly.

Answer: B. A confined liquid transmits pressure equally in all directions

Option A states the exact opposite of why brakes work - they rely on fluid not compressing. When brakes feel spongy it is usually air in the lines, because air (unlike the fluid) is compressible and soaks up the pressure.

Q4Choosing the right measuring tool

A mechanic needs to measure the small gap on a spark plug or the clearance between two close parts. Which tool is made for this job?
  • A. Torque wrench
  • B. Micrometer
  • C. Feeler gauge
  • D. Pipe wrench
Show the solution

A feeler gauge is a fan of thin metal blades, each marked with an exact thickness. You slide blades into the gap until one fits snugly, and its label tells you the gap size.

Answer: C. Feeler gauge

A micrometer (option B) is the tempting distractor - it is very precise, but it measures the outside dimension of an object, not the width of a narrow gap you have to reach into. A torque wrench sets tightness, and a pipe wrench grips round stock; neither measures a gap.

Q5Picking the right saw

You need to cut a wooden board across the grain - a crosscut - with the cleanest edge. Which hand saw is designed for that cut?
  • A. Rip saw
  • B. Crosscut saw
  • C. Hacksaw
  • D. Coping saw
Show the solution

A crosscut saw has knife-like teeth angled to slice through wood fibers that run across your cut line, leaving a clean edge. The name tells you the job: it cuts across the grain.

Answer: B. Crosscut saw

The rip saw is the paired trap: its chisel-shaped teeth are built to cut with the grain, along the board's length. A hacksaw is for metal and a coping saw for tight curves. On this section, "rip = along the grain, crosscut = across it" is the pairing they test again and again.

Q6Fasteners and thread direction

A nut on a bolt has ordinary right-hand threads. To loosen and remove the nut, you turn it:
  • A. Clockwise
  • B. Counterclockwise
  • C. Either direction works equally
  • D. Straight off without turning
Show the solution

Standard right-hand threads follow "righty-tighty, lefty-loosey": clockwise tightens, counterclockwise loosens. To back the nut off you turn it counterclockwise.

Answer: B. Counterclockwise

A few fasteners use reverse (left-hand) threads on purpose - the left pedal of a bicycle and some grinder nuts - so they do not shake loose in use. But unless a question tells you the thread is left-hand, assume the normal right-hand rule.

How to prepare for a vocabulary-driven section

Notice what these six share: each turns on recognizing one term or the job of one part - the order of the strokes, what the thermostat controls, why fluid moves the brakes, which tool reaches a gap, which saw crosses the grain, which way the threads turn. You do not need to be a mechanic; you need the words. The fastest way to find the words you are missing is to see where real test-takers slip - work through the Auto & Shop questions learners miss most next.

Keep practicing

Ready for a full-length practice set?

These six are a taste. Our downloadable ASVAB practice pack gives you a full timed exam with worked explanations for every question - start with the free sample, then grab the complete pack when you're ready.

Prefer the complete set? The full ASVAB practice tests covering all nine subtests are on Udemy with 300 practice questions and visuals.

Frequently asked questions

Does Auto & Shop Information count toward my AFQT score?
No. The AFQT is built only from Arithmetic Reasoning, Mathematics Knowledge, Word Knowledge and Paragraph Comprehension. Auto & Shop Information is a technical subtest - it feeds the mechanical-maintenance line scores that open up jobs like vehicle and aircraft mechanic, heavy-equipment operator and construction.
Is Auto & Shop one subtest or two?
It depends on the version. On the computer (CAT) ASVAB they are two separate subtests - Auto Information and Shop Information - each with about 10-11 questions. On the paper version they are combined into a single 25-question section. The content is the same either way.
What topics does Auto & Shop Information cover?
Automotive systems - the engine and its four-stroke cycle, ignition, fuel, cooling, brakes, the drivetrain and the electrical system - plus shop knowledge: hand and power tools, fasteners, measuring tools, common materials, and basic wood- and metal-working practice.
I'm not a 'car person' - can I still score well?
Yes. The section rewards knowing what each part and tool is for, not mechanic-level depth. Learn the job of the thermostat, the feeler gauge, the crosscut saw and so on in plain language, and practice questions to find the gaps in that vocabulary.

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