350 likes | 679 Views
ASTB REVIEW. The Test. Math Skills Test (MST) 30 Questions / 25 Minutes Quantitative aptitude Arithmetic reasoning General mathematics Algebra Plane geometry Reading Skills Test (RST) 27 questions / 25 min Verbal aptitude Sentence comprehension. The Test.
E N D
The Test • Math Skills Test (MST) • 30 Questions / 25 Minutes • Quantitative aptitude • Arithmetic reasoning • General mathematics • Algebra • Plane geometry • Reading Skills Test (RST) • 27 questions / 25 min • Verbal aptitude • Sentence comprehension
The Test • Mechanical Comprehension Test (MCT) • 30 Questions / 15 Minutes • Mechanical aptitude • Principles involved in the operation of mechanical devices • Basic physics • …. • Spatial Apperception Test (SAT) • 35 Questions / 10 Minutes • Recognition of position or altitude of an airplane by viewing from ground and horizon
The Test • Aviation/Nautical Information Test (ANT) • 30 Questions / 15 Minutes • Basic aviation and nautical terminology, principles, and practices • Aviation Supplemental Test • 34 Questions / 25 Minutes • Mixture of above types of questions • Don’t stress about this section, just do the best you can.
The Scores • Academic Qualification Rating (AQR) • Scoring emphasis on MST • Pilot Flight Aptitude Rating (PFAR) • Scoring emphasis on ANIT, SAT • Flight Officer Flight Aptitude Rating (FOFAR) • Scoring emphasis on MST
Sample Test Problems No Penalty for Guessing These only demonstrate a sampling of questions found on the ASTB. For a more comprehensive sampling, use one of the ASTB study guides*. *NOMI does not endorse any particular guide.
MST (1) • Two trains running on the same track travel at the rates of 30 and 35 mph, respectively. If the slower train starts out an hour earlier, how long will it take the faster train to catch up with it? • (A) 4 hours • (B) 5 hours • (C) 6 hours • (D) 7 hours In 1 hour, slower train is 30 miles ahead. Every hour, the faster train gains 5 miles (it is 5mph faster) 30/5 = 6 hours to gain that 30 mile lead
MST (2) • A naval detachment has enough rations to feed sixteen people for 10 days. If four more people join the detachment, for how many fewer days will the rations last? • (A) 1 • (B) 2 • (C) 3 • (D) 4 Second Technique to solve: let n = # ration days for 20 people 16 x 10 = 20 x n n = 160/20 = 8 days (2 days less) 16 people for 10 days 16 x 10 = 160 rations 16 + 4 = 20 people total 160 / 20 = 8 days Therefore 2 days less
MST (3) • A field can be plowed by 9 machines in 5 hours. If 3 machines are broken and cannot be used, how many hours will it take to plow the field? • (A) 7 ½ hours • (B) 8 ½ hours • (C) 9 ½ hours • (D) 10 ½ hours Other Method: n = # hours for 6 machines 9 x 5 = 6 x n 45 = 6n n = 45/6 = 7.5 9 machines take 5 hours, so.. 9 x 5 = 45 hours for 1 machine 9 x 5 = 1 x n (n = # hrs for 1 machine) If 3 are broken: 9 – 3 = 6 machines working 1 x 45 = 6 x c (c= # hrs for 6 machines) n = 45/6 = 7 ½ hours
MST (4) • A family drove from New York to San Francisco, a distance of 3,000 miles. They drove 1/10 of the distance the first day and 1/9 of the remaining distance the second day. How many miles were left to be driven? • (A) 2,200 • (B) 2,300 • (C) 2,400 • (D) 2,500 First day: Drove 1/10 of 3000 = 300 Therefore 2,700 miles remaining Second day: Drove 1/9 of 2,700 = 300 Therefore 2,400 miles remaining
Other MST tips • Triangle • 180 degrees total • Right triangle has 1 corner = 90° • Complementary angles add up to 90° • Pythagorean Theorem a² + b² = c² • Areas • Circumference
MCT (1) Y • In the figure shown above, X is the driver gear and Y is the driven gear. If the idler gear is rotating clockwise, • (A) gear X and gear Y are rotating clockwise • (B) gear X and gear Y are rotating counterclockwise • (C) gear X is rotating clockwise, while gear Y is rotating counterclockwise X idler
MCT (2) • The maximum weight, W, that can be lifted as shown with a pull of 100 pounds is • (A) 100 pounds • (B) 200 pounds • (C) 300 pounds 100 lb. pull W The number of pulleys indicates the mechanical advantage. In this case, it is 2 2 x 100lbs = 200lbs
MCT (3) • This one’s a little tougher. Don’t be skerred!
MCT (3) • A 5-kg wad of clay is tied to the end of a string. A 300-gm copper moving horizontally is embedded into the clay and causes the clay and ball to rise to a height of 0.2 m. The initial velocity v1 of the ball is nearly • A) 6.3 m/s • B) 7.3 m/s • C) 8.3 m/s KE = ½ mv2 and PE = mgh. By conservation of energy, KE must equal PE. Solve for v! ½ (0.3 kg )(v2) = (5 + 0.3 kg)(9.8 m/s)(0.2 m)
RST (1) • The voters showed their ____ by staying away from the polls • (A) affluence • (B) apathy • (C) interest • (D) registration -lack of interest
OTHER RST HINTS • Another type of questions consists of a passage followed by a list of statements. You must identify the statement that is most true. • Hint: DO NOT assume anything, even if you know it’s true. The most correct statement is the one that can DIRECTLY be made from the passage.
RST (2) • “Genuine coins have an even and distinct corrugated outer edge; the corrugated outer edges on counterfeit coins are usually uneven, crooked, or missing.” • counterfeit coins can rarely be distinguished from genuine coins • counterfeit coins never lose their corrugated outer edge • genuine coins never lose their uneven, corrugated outer edge • the quality of the outer edge may show that a coin is counterfeit There is nothing in the quote to support the first three choices
RST (3) • “Education should not stop when the individual has been prepared to make a livelihood and to live in modern society; living would be mere existence were there no appreciation and enjoyment of the riches of art, literature, and science.” This quotation best supports the statement that true education • deals chiefly with art, literature, and science • disregards practical goals • prepares an individual for a full enjoyment of life • teaches a person to focus on the routine problems of life The other choices do not address the quotation as much as the third choice.
SAT • Look for position of the horizon • Climbing, diving, level flight • If the horizon is above the middle of the picture, the plane is diving • If the horizon is below the middle, climbing • Look for angle of the horizon • Look for position of the coastline
SAT (1) Distance above horizon 1. Check horizon 2. Angle of horizon 3. Check for land position Distance below horizon Traveling AWAY from land mass
SAT (2) Distance above horizon greater 1. Check horizon 2. Angle of horizon 3. Check for land position
SAT (3) Distance above horizon 1. Check horizon 2. Angle of horizon 3. Check for land position Distance below horizon Land mass on left side
ANT • Plane parts
ANIT concepts • Wing diagram Camber – curvature of wing Chord Angle of Attack Span
ANIT • Planes Of Motion YAW PITCH ROLL
18 14L 14R Wind direction it is coming FROM 32L 32R 36 225 ANIT • Direction Runways direction of landing/takeoff Parallel Runways(notice opposite ends) 360 270 090 180
ANIT • Wing Types How they are attached to the airplane How they look Dihedral wings give aircraft roll stability Photo Under Construction (I don’t have one) – so you get my stick figures… Anhedral wings enhanced roll performance
Aviation Knowledge • Wake Turbulence • Angle of Attack • Ground Effect • Lights • Four Forces • Wing Shapes • Flight Controls • Space Knowledge • Nautical Terminology
ANIT (1) • The pilot yaws an airplane by using the • (A) flaps • (B) ailerons • (C) elevators • (D) trim • (E) rudder
ANIT (2) • Camber is the: • (A) curvature of an airfoil between the leading edge and the trailing edge • (B) distance between the leading edge and the trailing edge • (C) distance between each wingtip • (D) angle between the chord line of the wing and the relative wind • (E) angle between the longitudinal axis of an airplane and the wing chord line
ANIT (3) • A nautical mile is: • (A) 2 times that of a statute mile • (B) 1.5 times that of a statute mile • (C) 1.25 times that of a statute mile • (D) 1.15 times that of a statute mile • (E) equal to a statute mile
ANIT (4) • A navigation light associated with “port” is: • (A) white • (B) red • (C) green • (D) yellow • (E) none of the above -indicates the direction of the vessel -starboard -special circumstances
ANIT (5) • A stall is caused by” • (A) a hesitation of the aircraft engine • (B) the horizontal component of lift • (C) the separation of airflow from the wing’s upper surface • (D) a change in the coefficient of lift • (E) a reduced angle of attack
Resources • NASA Website • http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/guided.htm • Has lots of info, scroll down to “Parts of Plane” • NKO • Sign in to https://wwwa.nko.navy.mil • Click on ‘Learning’ • Scroll down and you should see a picture that says ‘Navy Education Resource Center’, click • Now click on ‘Online Books’ or ‘Online Practice Tests’